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Australia pulled away late to produce a 3-0 victory over Chinese Taipei in the 2026 World Baseball Classic opener at the Tokyo Dome.

Catcher Robbie Perkins led Australia with a two-run home run to break a scoreless tie in the bottom of the fifth inning. Travis Bazzana added an insurance run in the bottom of the seventh inning with a solo home run.

Perkins worked with three different pitchers including Alex Wells, who pitched three scoreless innings as the starter and struck out six. He threw 28 strikes on 46 pitches.

Chinese Taipei struggled to produce any offense throughout the game. The team had a chance at the end, managing to get a pair of runners on base before Australia secured the final out.

‘Growing up, I always looked ahead and kind of had a vision of things I wanted to do in this game, and this was a big part of it,’ Bazzana, the top pick in the 2024 MLB Draft, said leading up to the opener. ‘Young me would be dreaming of (this) and now it’s here. Just got to make the most of it.’

Check out highlights from the contest:

Final: Australia 3, Chinese Taipei 0

Chinese Taipei managed to get runners on first and second base in the ninth inning but were unable to get the runners home to tie the game.

Australia pitcher Jon Kennedy caught the bouncing ball and made a running attempt toward first base, where he nearly stumbled but tossed the ball to record the final out.

It was just the second shutout victory for Australia in WBC play.

Australia adds to lead in seventh

Travis Bazzana hits a solo home run in the bottom of the seventh inning to increase Australia’s lead to 3-0. Bazzana sent the ball 383 feet to right field.

Bazzana was the first overall pick in the 2024 MLB Draft by the Cleveland Guardians.

Australia takes first lead against Chinese Taipei

Robbie Perkins put Australia on the board with a homer, taking a 2-0 lead against Chinese Taipei in the bottom of the fifth inning against pitcher Po-Yu Chen.

Chinese Taipei records first hit after Australia’s pitching change

Yu Chang produced Chinese Taipei’s first hit of the game in the third inning against Australia pitcher Jack O’Loughlin.

O’Loughlin was called out of the bullpen to replace Alex Wells. Wells struck out six and allowed just one walk on 46 pitches (28 strikes).

Chinese Taipei and Australia scoreless through two innings

Australia pitcher Alex Wells has not allowed a hit through the first two innings of play. He has struck out three while allowing just one walk. He has thrown 33 pitches.

Jo-Hsi Hsu of Chinese Taipei did not allow a hit in the second inning. Hsu had 21 of his first 27 pitches result in a strike. He has struck out two batters.

Chinese Taipei and Australia remain scoreless after first inning

The two teams remain scoreless after the first inning of play to open the World Baseball Classic. Chinese Taipei pitcher Jo-Hsi Hsu produced the third out to end the inning after striking out Alex Hall of Australia. Curtis Mead recorded the only hit of the inning against Hsu.

Australia pitcher Alex Wells produced one strikeout and a walk against Chinese Taipei in the first inning.

How to watch Chinese Taipei vs Australia: TV channel, stream

  • Matchup: Chinese Taipei vs. Australia
  • Time: 10 p.m.
  • Location: Tokyo (Tokyo Dome)
  • TV: FS1
  • Streaming: FOX One App

Stream the World Baseball Classic on Fubo

Why is Stuart Fairchild playing for Chinese Taipei?

Stuart Fairchild will serve as the leadoff batter for Chinese Taipei in World Baseball Classic action against Australia.

Fairchild is eligible to play for Chinese Taipei because his mother is Taiwanese.

He credits catcher Lyle Lin for recruiting him to the Chinese Taipei roster, according to Taiwan’s Overseas Community Affairs Council.

Chinese Taipei’s starting lineup vs. Australia

CF – Stuart Fairchild

DH – An-Ko Lin

RF – Chen Chieh-hsien

3B – Yu Chang

1B – Nien-ting Wu

SS – Kun-yu Chiang

2B – Tzu-wei Lin

C – Shao-Hung Chiang

LF – Chen-wei Chen

Australia’s starting lineup vs. Chinese Taipei

2B – Travis Bazzana

3B – Curtis Mead

CF – Aaron Whitefield

DH – Alex Hall

SS – Jarryd Dale

1B – Rixon Wingrove

C – Robbie Perkins

LF – Chris Burke

RF – Tim Kennelly

Who is Australia’s WBC starting pitcher vs. Chinese Taipei?

Alex Wells will serve as Australia’s starting pitcher on Wednesday against Chinese Taipei. Wells previously played for the Baltimore Orioles in 2021 and 2022.

He started eight of the 13 games he played in, allowing 58 hits and 34 earned runs while striking out 32 in 46.1 innings pitched.

Who is Chinese Taipei’s WBC starting pitcher vs. Australia?

Jo-Hsi Hsu will serve as the starting pitcher for Chinese Taipei on Wednesday against Australia. He does not have any MLB experience.

Hsu spent the past four years in the CPBL. He has a 16-18 record, starting in 60 of the 64 games he played in. He’s allowed 229 hits, 82 earned run and nine home runs while striking out 349 in 305 innings pitched.

Australia WBC roster 2026

Pitchers

  • Kieren Hall (RHP) – Perth Heat
  • Ky Hampton (RHP) – Adelaide Giants
  • Josh Hendrickson (LHP) – Adelaide Giants
  • Sam Holland (RHP) – Brisbane Bandits
  • Jon Kennedy (LHP) – Brisbane Bandits
  • Connor MacDonald (RHP) – Brisbane Bandits
  • Cooper Morgan (LHP) – Adelaide Giants
  • Mitch Neunborn (RHP) – Philadelphia Phillies org
  • Jack O’Loughlin (LHP) – Adelaide Giants
  • Warwick Saupold (RHP) – Perth Heat
  • Blake Townsend (LHP) – Texas Rangers org
  • Todd Van Steensel (RHP) – Adelaide Giants
  • Alex Wells (LHP) – Sydney Blue Sox
  • Lachlan Wells (LHP) – LG Twins (KBO)
  • Coen Wynne (RHP) – Sydney Blue Sox

Catchers

  • Mitchell Edwards – Adelaide Giants
  • Alex Hall – Perth Heat
  • Robbie Perkins – Brisbane Bandits

Infielders

  • Travis Bazzana – Cleveland Guardians org
  • George Callil – Brisbane Bandits
  • Jarryd Dale – KIA Tigers (KBO)
  • Robbie Glendinning – Adelaide Giants
  • Curtis Mead – Chicago White Sox
  • Logan Wade – Brisbane Bandits
  • Rixon Wingrove – Brisbane Bandits

Outfielders

  • Ulrich Bojarski – Melbourne Aces
  • Chris Burke – Melbourne Aces
  • Max Durrington – Oakland Athletics org
  • Tim Kennelly – Perth Heat
  • Aaron Whitefield – Melbourne Aces

Chinese Taipei WBC roster 2026

  • Pitchers: Hsu Jo-hsi, Gu Lin Ruei-yang, Lin Yu-min, Lin Wei-en, Po-Yu Chen, Zhuang Chen Zhong-Ao, Sha Tzu-chen, Sun Yi-lei, Tseng Jyun-yue, Lin Kai-wei, Lin Shi-xiang, Chang Yi, Chen Kuan-yu, Hu Chih-wei, Cheng Hao-chun, and Zhang Jun-wei.
  • Catchers: Kungkuan Giljegiljaw, Lyle Lin (Lin Chia-cheng) and Jiang Shao-hong.
  • Infielders: Yu Chang, Tsung-Che Cheng, Lee Hao-yu, Chiang Kun-yu, Wu Nien-ting and Lin Tzu-wei.
  • Outfielders: Stuart Fairchild, Chen Chieh-hsien (Captain), Lin An-ko and Chen Chen-wei.

What WBC pool are Chinese Taipei and Australia in?

Chinese Taipei and Australia are two of the five teams playing in Pool C of the World Baseball Classic. The rest of the group includes Japan, Korea and Czechia.

World Baseball Classic Pool C schedule

  • March 5: Chinese Taipei vs. Australia
  • March 5: Czechia vs. South Korea
  • March 6: Australia vs. Czechia
  • March 6: Japan vs. Chinese Taipei
  • March 7: Chinese Taipei vs. Czechia
  • March 7: South Korea vs. Japan
  • March 8: Chinese Taipei vs. South Korea
  • March 8: Australia vs. Japan
  • March 9: South Korea vs. Australia
  • March 10: Czechia vs. Japan
This post appeared first on USA TODAY

NEW YORK — Two looks, and they both hit rim.

After clawing back from an eight-point deficit with just fewer than three minutes to play in the fourth quarter, the New York Knicks got a pair of clean looks with seconds left in their game against the Oklahoma City Thunder.

Yet, in what could be a potential NBA Finals preview, it was the Thunder who escaped Wednesday, March 4 with a 103-100 victory to improve their record to 49-15, the best mark in the NBA.

Thunder forward Chet Holmgren led all players with 28 points, 22 of which came in the first half.

Reigning NBA MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander dropped 26 points and 8 assists, extending his streak of consecutive games with at least 20 points scored to 124.

Throughout the game, the Knicks tried to force the ball out of Gilgeous-Alexander’s hands, and he repeatedly made the right pass to open Thunder players.

The Knicks had six players reach double figures, with Karl-Anthony Towns leading the way with 17 points on 7-of-8 shooting. He also hauled in a game-high 17 rebounds, though he fouled out late in the game.

The Knicks fell to 40-23.

USA TODAY Sports provided updates and highlights from Wednesday night’s Oklahoma City Thunder-New York Knicks game:

Thunder vs. Knicks highlights

End Q4: Thunder 103, Knicks 100

They got two open looks to tie the game, but both rimmed out.

Coach Mike Brown drew up a play that got Jalen Brunson an open look at a would-be game-tying 3 in the left corner. Brunson put up the shot but it bounced off the rim. The ball was tipped out to Knicks forward OG Anunoby near the top of the key. Anunoby scooped the ball, stepped back, but the shot fell short and bounced off front rim.

Simply put, the Knicks went cold at the wrong time. New York, which entered the fourth quarter with a three-point lead, shot just 33.3% in the final period, eventually ceding the lead to the Thunder.

Oklahoma City capitalized and attacked the paint, with Shai Gilgeous-Alexander hitting a few big baskets late, none other than a stepback 3, Oklahoma City’s final bucket.

Knicks down 3 with 6.0 seconds left to play

New York has battled back and has the chance to tie the game at 103. Coach Mike Brown called a timeout to draw up a play. Both teams are in the bonus, so the Thunder may opt to put New York on the line.

Thunder reclaim lead

After getting a quick blow on the bench, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander has returned for Oklahoma City, which is now up 91-86, with 6:33 left to play in the game.

Gilgeous-Alexander, who has 21 points, extended his streak of consecutive games with at least 20 points to 124, which is just two behind Wilt Chamberlain’s record of 126.

Josh Hart returns to the floor

After leaving the game early in the third quarter with an apparent back injury, Knicks forward Josh Hart has returned to the game.

End Q3: Knicks 80, Thunder 77

It’s not that the Thunder shot poorly in the third quarter — they converted their attempts at a 46.7% clip — it’s that they took seven fewer shots than the Knicks did.

And with those attempts, New York capitalized. The Knicks shot 14-of-22 (63.6%) from the floor in the third quarter to erase a 10-point deficit at the start of the quarter. And with the final shot of the third, a corner 3 from Mikal Bridges, the Knicks took their first lead since very early in the second quarter. Five different Knicks are scoring double figures, with Karl-Anthony Towns — who remains a perfect 6-of-6 from the floor — leading the team with 15 points.

For the Thunder, turnovers were the main issue in the third. After Chet Holmgren dropped 22 points in the first half, he failed to score a single point in the third. He continues to lead the team, though Shai Gilgeous-Alexander has added 19 points and 7 assists.

Knicks tie it up

The New York run in the third quarter has continued. The Thunder have committed several turnovers in the period, and a Jalen Brunson 3 that clanked off the rim before caroming off the backboard and through the net tied the game at 72 apiece with 2:56 left in the third quarter.

Alex Caruso heads to locker room

After taking a hard fall when attempting to haul in a rebound, Alex Caurso fell onto the court and immediately grabbed at his leg. He was slow to get up and trudged toward the bench, where he spoke briefly with a trainer. The two went into the locker room, though Caruso reemerged shortly after.

Knicks close the gap

New York has gone on an 11-4 run to close the deficit to 6 points with 5:28 left in the third quarter. Landry Shamet has come off the bench to spark the run with a couple of scoop layups, while Mikale Bridges and Karl-Anthony Towns have also added baskets.

The Thunder are up 67-61.

Josh Hart heads to locker room

After airballing a corner 3 with 10:50 to play in the third quarter, Knicks forward Josh Hart immediately clutched at his lower back in apparent discomfort. At the next whistle, Hart took himself out of the game and headed into the New York locker room with a trainer.

After several minutes, Hart reemerged and took his spot on the bench, still grimacing. A trainer placed a black band around his chest and back.

Knicks post their lowest scoring first half of the season

New York, which shot just 35.6% from the floor in the first half, scored just 40 points before intermission, marking its lowest scoring first half of the 2025-26 season so far. The previous low was 42 points, which came Feb. 6 in an eventual 38-point loss against the Pistons.

End Q2: Thunder 50, Knicks 40

Although both these teams are playing the second legs of back-to-backs that started in different cities, it was the Knicks who displayed that more in the first half.

New York struggled to find the bottom of the net in the second period, shooting just 7-of-22 (31.8%) Oklahoma City emphasized closing out, contesting New York’s perimeter shots and rarely giving away an open look.

Jalen Brunson shot just 1-of-8 in the half for 2 points, while center Karl-Anthony Towns attempted just 4 shots, though he made each one, scoring 9 points. Mohamed Diawara also has a team-high 9 points.

The Thunder, meanwhile, are playing in control. They’re shooting a reasonable 46.3% from the floor, but they’re merely looking for the best shot available. As the Knicks have thrown bodies at Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the ball has swung around to find the open player. More often than not, that has been Chet Holmgren, who leads all players with 22 points on 8-of-11 shooting, including a blistering 6-of-8 (75%) from 3-point range.

Gilgeous-Alexander has added 11 points, but has a team-high 7 assists.

The Knicks’ plan for SGA

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander has started this game extremely well. He has been an efficient 4-of-7 from the floor — with no 3 pointers attempted — for 9 points. But the Knicks are closing his lanes to penetrate as soon as he attacks the paint. This is not at all dissimilar from the way other teams defend SGA, but he’s quickly getting the ball out of his hands to find open teammates.

And, if they’re not immediately open, OKC players have swung the ball around to find that open look. Gilgeous-Alexander leads all Thunder players with 5 assists.

As the Thunder have settled, they’ve also opened their biggest lead of the game, 13 points, at 44-31.

End Q1: Thunder 25, Knicks 23

In many ways, this was a quarter the Knicks should’ve lost by a lot more.

They shot just 39.1% from the floor, and All-Star point guard Jalen Brunson finished the period just 1-of-5 for 2 points. They lost the rebounding battle by four. Yet, New York overcame early shooting struggles to get key stops on the Thunder late in the first to keep things manageable.

Chet Holmgren was the star for Oklahoma City, leading all players with 14 points. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander chipped in 9 on 4-of-5 shooting and added 2 assists.

The Knicks, meanwhile, have Mohamed Diawara to thank for this not being out of hand. He came off the bench and instantly drained a pair of 3s and also swiped the ball out of Jared McCain’s hands for a steal that led to a Landry Shamet bucket. His play seemed to invigorate the Knicks, who had six different players score at least one point in the first quarter. Diawara and OG Anunoby tied for a team-high 6 points in the period.

Knicks coach Mike Brown was also called for a technical foul after he argued a non-call on a Shai Gilgeous-Alexander drive, when Brown thought that Jalen Brunson had drawn a charge. Brown appeared to make like contact with the official, who only assessed the one tech.

Chet Holmgren comes out aggressive

As Oklahoma City has moved the ball around, it has often found forward Chet Holmgren, who has started the game 5-of-7 (including 4-of-6 from 3) for a game-high 14 points.

In fact, with 3:32 left to play in the period, he has outscored the Knicks entire team, which is 5-of-17.

Thunder vs. Knicks is underway

The Thunder came out strong and dictated pace, draining five of their first six field goal attempts. OKC pushed pace and moved the ball around to compromise New York’s defense, which was slow to help.

The Knicks, however, made their first shot before having their following five clank out. New York is getting quality looks, they’re just not dropping, particularly from 3; the Knicks have started the game just 1-of-6 (16.7%) from beyond the arc.

Despite that, New York is only down 17-10 midway through the period.

The MVP shows up to MSG dressed to the nines

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and the Thunder, similar to many teams who get hyped up to play in this iconic venue, tend to play well here. It’s the one trip Gilgeous-Alexander and the Thunder will make here this season — barring any potential matchup in the NBA Finals.

In case this is indeed his one trip here, SGA made it count with his pre-game look.

Thunder vs. Knicks starting lineups

Oklahoma City Thunder

  • Shai Gilgeous-Alexander
  • Luguentz Dort
  • Cason Wallace
  • Chet Holmgren
  • Isaiah Hartenstein

New York Knicks

  • Jalen Brunson
  • Mikal Bridges
  • OG Anunoby
  • Josh Hart
  • Karl-Anthony Towns

Thunder vs. Knicks injury report

After missing Tuesday night’s game against the Bulls, reigning NBA MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is not on the injury report and is expected to play.

Oklahoma City Thunder

  • Branden Carlson, out (lower back strain)
  • Ajay Mitchell, out (left ankle sprain)
  • Thomas Sorber, out (ACL)
  • Nikola Topic, out (G League)
  • Jalen Williams, out (right hamstring strain)

New York Knicks

  • Pacome Dadiet, questionable (G League)
  • Trey Jemison III, questionable (two-way)
  • Dillon Jones, questionable (two-way)
  • Miles McBride, out (core muscle surgery)
  • Kevin McCullar Jr., questionable (two-way)
  • Mitchell Robinson, out (left ankle)

Thunder vs. Knicks odds

  • Spread: Thunder by 4.5 (-110)
  • Over/Under: 222.5 (O/U -114)
  • Moneyline: Thunder -184, Knicks +150

How to watch Thunder vs. Knicks: TV channel, live stream

  • Start time: 7 p.m. ET
  • Location: Madison Square Garden (New York)
  • TV channel: ESPN
  • Live stream: ESPN, Fubo
This post appeared first on USA TODAY

It’s almost dancing time.

As everyone flips their calendars to March, the countdown to women college basketball’s 2026 NCAA Tournament is officially on. Before March Madness begins on March 18, the participants must be determined. And the first spots are up for grabs as conference tournaments kick off around the nation on Wednesday.

South Carolina (SEC), UCLA (Big Ten), Duke (ACC) and TCU (Big 12) each earned No. 1 seeds and double-byes in their respective conferences and have the easiest path to winning their postseason tournaments. All four teams won their conference tournament last season and are looking to repeat.

The winners of the conference tournaments earn an automatic bid into March Madness. Every other team will have to sweat it out on Selection Sunday on March 15 to see if they received at-large bid.

USA TODAY Sports is following along with the Power Four conference tournaments. Follow along for live updates, highlights and results here:

Final: Kansas 56, UCF 35

Kansas is moving on to the second round after a blowout win over UCF, which didn’t score more than 10 points in any frame in the game.

Jaliya Davis led Kansas with 10 points, while Lily Meister and Elle Evans added eight points each. Jacorriah Bracey of UCF had 10 points in the loss.

Final: Oregon 82, Purdue 64

Oregon built up a 23-point lead in the first half and never surrendered. Purdue attempted to mount a comeback in the second half, getting the deficit down to 12 points in the fourth quarter, but it wasn’t enough.

Purdue and Oregon each had 25 made field goals in the game, and the Boilermakers had eight 3-pointers compared to the Ducks’ five.  What put Oregon over the edge was the free throw disparity: Oregon went 27-of-29 from the line, accounting for one-third of its points, while Purdue went just 6-of-13. Three Boilermakers fouled out in the fourth quarter.

Katie Fiso led Oregon with 20 points on 7-of-14 shooting, including a 6-of-7 from the free throw line. Ehis Etute had a double-double for the Ducks, putting up 16 points and 12 rebounds.

No. 11 Oregon will advance to play No. 6 Maryland on Thursday at approximately 9 p.m.

Final: Alabama 65, Missouri 48

Ace Austin scored 14 points and was one of four Alabama players to score in double figures as the No. 11 Crimson Tide beat the No. 14 Tigers on Wednesday night at the SEC Tournament in Greenville, South Carolina.

Alabama (22-9) also got 13 points from Diana Collins, 12 points from Ta’Mia Scott and 10 points from Essence Cody. Karly Weathers also grabbed a game-high 16 rebounds.

Jordana Reisma paced Missouri (16-16) with 15 points, while Grace Slaughter had a double-double of 11 points and 11 rebounds.

Alabama grabbed 14 offensive rebounds and turned them into 23 points. The Crimson Tide outscored the Tigers 24-11 in the fourth quarter to pull away.

The Crimson Tide will face No. 6 Tennessee at 8:30 p.m. ET on Thursday on the SEC Network. −Mitchell Northam

Halftime: Kansas 27, UCF 19

Kansas women’s basketball has a 10-point lead over UCF heading into halftime.

The Jayhawks’ bench has kept Kansas in the driver’s seat, outscoring the starters 16-11. Brittany Harshaw has six points off the bench, while Jaliya Davis added six points and two assists.

UCF shot 26% from the field and was kept off the free throw line in the first half. Jacorriah Bracey has a team-high six points for UCF. − Cydney Henderson

No. 11 Kansas vs. No. 14 UCF , 9 p.m. | (ESPN+)

UCF starting lineup

Head coach: Sytia Messer

  • 2 Kristol Ayson | G 5’9 – Senior
  • 3 Jacorriah Bracey | G 5’9 – Senior
  • 13 Summer Yancy | G/F 5’11 – Sophomore
  • 33 Mahogany Chandler-Roberts | F 6’2 – Sophomore
  • 35 Khyala Ngodu | C 6’3 – Junior

Kansas starting lineup

Head coach: Brandon Schneider

12 S’Mya Nichols | G 6’0 – Junior

13 Libby Fandel | G 6-1 – Freshman

22 Sania Copeland | G 5-7 – Senior

25 Jaliya Davis | F 6-2 – Freshman

52 Lilly Meister | F 6-3 – Senior

Halftime: Alabama 31, Missouri 20

Behind 10 points from Essence Cody, the No. 11 Crimson Tide led the No. 14 Tigers at the break in the final game on the opening day of the SEC Tournament in Greenville, South Carolina.

Alabama knocked down five 3-pointers in the first half, and turned six offensive rebounds into nine second-chance points. Sitting courtside supporting the Crimson Tide is Sarah Ashlee Barker, a former two-time All-SEC selection who was picked in the first round of the WNBA Draft last spring by the LA Sparks.

The winner of this game will face No. 6 Tennessee at 8:30 p.m. ET on Thursday on the SEC Network. −Mitchell Northam

Halftime: Oregon 47, Purdue 24

Oregon methodically built up its lead in the second quarter, outscoring Purdue 26-12 to go into halftime with a 23-point advantage. Oregon finished the second quarter on a 6-0 run, holding Purdue to a two-minute scoring drought.

The Ducks have dominated inside, with 22 points in the paint and 16 second-chance points off seven offensive rebounds. Purdue has eight offensive rebounds, but hasn’t been able to capitalize with seven second-chance points. 

Ehis Etute is leading Oregon with 12 points and eight rebounds in just 11 minutes of play. − Chloe Henderson

Final: Arizona State 54, Arizona 51

The victory marked the third time the Sun Devils have defeated the Wildcats this season.

Heloisa Carrera has 16 points for the Sun Devils, who got points from every one of the nine players that saw the court. Arizona State shot 40% from the field and dominated the paint, outscoring Arizona 36-18.

Daniah Trammell and Sumayah Sugapong each had 12 points for Arizona.

It wasn’t a clean game by either team. Arizona State (20) and Arizona (18) combined for 38 turnovers. — Cydney Henderson

#14 Missouri vs. #11 Alabama, 8:30 p.m. ET | SEC Network

Missouri starting lineup

Head coach: Kelli Harper

  • 10 Jordana Reisma | F 6-3 Senior
  • 22 Chloe Sotell | G 6-0 Sophomore
  • 1 Shannon Dowell | G 5-10 Junior
  • 23 Abbey Schreacke | G 6-0 Junior
  • 0 Grace Slaughter | G 6-2 Junior

Alabama starting lineup

Head coach: Kristy Curry

  • 21 Essence Cody | F 6-4 Junior
  • 20 Diana Collins | G 5-9 Junior
  • 15 Ta’Mia Scott | G 6-0 Senior
  • 22 Karly Weathers | G 5-11 Senior
  • 23 Jessica Timmons | G 5-8 Senior

No. 11 Oregon vs. No. 14 Purdue | 8:30 p.m., Peacock

Oregon starting lineup

Head coach: Kelly Graves

  • 2 Katie Fiso | G 5-11 Sophomore
  • 14 Ari Long | G  6-0 Junior
  • 3 Sofia Bell | G 6-0 Junior
  • 1 Mia Jacobs | F 6-2 Senior
  • 35 Ehis Etute | F 6-0 Freshman

Purdue starting lineup

Head coach: Katie Gearlds

  • 3 Nya Smith | G 5-9 Sophomore
  • 11 McKenna Layden | G 6-2 Junior
  • 23 Kiki Smith | G 5-7 Junior
  • 44 Tara Daye | G 5-10 Junior
  • 22 Kendall Puryear | F 6-3 Sophomore

Final: Auburn 50, Texas A&M 49

Khady Leye’s layup with 5.3 seconds to play lifted No. 15 Auburn to an upset win over No. 10 Texas A&M in the opening round of the SEC Tournament on Wednesday night in Greenville, South Carolina.

Leye finished with 11 points and a career-high 15 rebounds in the first SEC Tournament victory for the Tigers (15-16) under first-year coach Larry Vickers. Kaitlyn Duhon added 14 points for Auburn, while Harissoum Coulibaly chipped in 11.

Ny’Ceara Pryor powered the Aggies (14-12) with 25 points and four assists. The loss for Texas A&M snaps a five-game winning streak and likely ends their hopes of making the NCAA Tournament under fourth-year coach Joni Taylor.

The Aggies lost leading rebounder Fatmata Janneh to an apparent right knee injury just before halftime when she hit the floor hard after a foul. Janneh did not return to the game, but was seen near the Aggies bench in the fourth quarter using crutches.

Auburn will face No. 7 Ole Miss on Thursday at 6 p.m. ET on the SEC Network. −Mitchell Northam

Final: Illinois 82, Wisconsin 70

Illinois controlled from the beginning, and an early 10-0 run helped the Illini keep a safe distance from its border rival for the entire game.

Illinois heavily benefitted from the free throw line, going 24-of-29. That helped the Illini overcome a dismal 2-of-19 shooting from the 3-point line. Destiny Jackson led Illinois with 21 points on 5-of-8 shooting, including an 11-of-13 from the free throw line.

Wisconsin made 7 of its 11 shots from the free throw line and 8 of 21 free throws, but that wasn’t enough for the Badgers. Gift Uchenna led the Badgers with 26 points.

Illinois will advance the second round and play No. 7 Michigan on Thursday. −Chloe Peterson

Halftime: Arizona State 29, Arizona 28

Arizona State has a one-point advantage over Arizona heading into halftime of the first round matchup at the Big 12 women’s basketball tournament.

Buckets are hard to come by in the physical battle. The Sun Devils are shooting 13-of-29 from the field and have an edge in the paint, outscoring the Wildcats 18-6. Heloisa Carrera and Marley Washenitz each have eight points for Arizona State.

The Wildcats are shooting 11-of-30 from the field. Sumayah Sugapong leads Arizona with 10 points and three rebounds.

Arizona vs. Arizona State: Flagrant 1 foul called

Things are getting chippy between the in-state rivals. Arizona forward Nora Francois was called for a Flagrant 1 foul on Arizona State guard Marley Washenitz on a rebound attempt. Referees determined the contact was excessive, hard and unnecessary.

Wisconsin starter Destiny Howell leaves game with injury

Destiny Howell left the Wisconsin-Illinois game with an apparent leg injury in the third quarter. Howell was helped off the floor by Wisconsin’s trainers, briefly sat at the end of the bench, then walked to the locker room under her own power. She then returned to the bench later in the quarter.

Howell averages 14.1 points per game for the Badgers. She had four points on 1-of-5 shooting, along with three rebounds and two assists, at the time of her injury on Wednesday night. She returned to the game with five minutes left in the third quarter. −Chloe Peterson

Arizona State goes on 9-0 run vs. Arizona

A lot is riding on this matchup for Arizona State. The Sun Devils need a win to keep their March Madness hopes alive as one of the first four out in USA TODAY Sports latest bracketology. With the stakes high, Arizona State appeared to have early jitters. They started the game 2-of-7 from the field with four turnovers and quickly found themselves in 10-2 hole early against Arizona. But Arizona State went on a 9-0 run to take a 11-10 lead over Arizona. − Cydney Henderson

Texas A&M’s leading rebounder goes down with apparent knee injury

Seven seconds before halftime of Texas A&M’s opening round SEC Tournament game against Auburn, junior forward Fatmata Janneh was fouled and hit the floor hard. Bon Secours Wellness Arena went quiet as Janneh grabbed her right knee and screamed in pain.

Texas A&M head coach Joni Taylor and the team’s trainer rushed to the floor to console a visibly emotional Janneh. After a few minutes, Aggies assistant coach Darius Taylor and another staffer helped the 6-foot-2 forward off the floor, keeping her from putting any weight on her right leg.

At halftime, Texas A&M trailed 23-21 with Janneh contributing two points and three rebounds. On the season, the transfer from Saint Peter’s is averaging 12 points and 10.2 rebounds per game — one of five SEC players averaging a double-double this season. — Mitchell Northam

Halftime: No. 10 Illinois 41, No. 15 Wisconsin 33

Illinois used an early 10-0 run in the first quarter to take the lead two minutes into the game, and hasn’t relinquished it since. Berry Wallace is leading the Illini with 11 points.

Wisconsin has had trouble taking care of the ball, turning it over 12 times in the first half. That has led to 13 Illinois points off of those turnovers. — Chloe Peterson

No. 10 Arizona State vs. No. 15 Arizona

How to watch Arizona State vs. Arizona

The Battle of the desert tips off at 4:30 ET on ESPN+

Arizona State starting lineup

Head coach: Molly Miller

  • 0 Gabby Elliott | G 5-10 – Senior
  • 11 Marley Washenitz | G 5-7 – Senior
  • 13 Last-Tear Poa |  G 5-11 – Senior
  • 14 Heloisa Carrera | F 6-2 – Sophomore
  • 21 McKinna Brackens | F 6-1 – Junior

Arizona Wildcats starting lineup

Head coach: Becky Burke

  • 3 Sumayah Sugapong | F 5-7 – Junior
  • 4 Noelani Cornfield | G 5-6 – Senior
  • 11 Tanyuel Welch | G 5-10 – Junior
  • 13 Nora Francois | F 6-2 – Senior
  • 33 Daniah Trammell | F 6-1 – Freshman

Colorado extends coach JR Payne through 2031

Colorado enters the Big 12 Tournament this week hoping to secure the wins necessary to make what would be its fourth NCAA Tournament trip in five years. And the Buffs will keep around the coach that has guided them to the Big Dance for the long term.

JR Payne received a contract extension through 2031, Colorado announced Wednesday afternoon. Already in her 10th season at the helm of the Buffs, she is the second-longest tenured coach in program history.

Payne — who grew up in Vancouver, played at Saint Mary’s, and previously coached at Southern Utah and Santa Clara — took over at Colorado in 2016. She’s had just two losing seasons and has won at least 20 games in each of the last five years. With Jaylyn Sherrod leading the way, the Buffs went to the Sweet 16 in 2023 and 2024, snapping a two-decade drought for the program of not making the second weekend of March Madness.

Colorado will face the winner of UCF and Kansas in the Big 12 Tournament on Thursday night at 8 p.m. ET in Kansas City. — Mitchell Northam

No. 15 Auburn vs No. 10 Texas A&M

How to watch Auburn vs Texas A&M

The first-round matchup between Auburn and Texas A&M tips off 6 p.m. ET on SEC Network.

Auburn Tigers starting lineup

Head coach: Larry Vickers

  • 1 Mya Petticord | G 5-9 Senior
  • 2 Ja’Mia Harris | G 5-11 Junior
  • 3 Harissoum Coulibaly | G 5-10 Freshman
  • 4 Kaitlyn Duhon | G 5-10 Junior
  • 6 Khady Leye | F 6-2 Sophomore

Texas A&M Aggies starting lineup

Head coach: Joni Taylor

  • 1 Ny’Ceara Pryor | G 5-3 Senior
  • 10 Lemyah Hylton | G 5-11 Senior
  • 20 Janae Kent | G 6-1 Junior
  • 32 Lauren Ware | F 6-5 Graduate
  • 44 Fatmata Janneh | F 6-2 Junior

Final: Georgia Tech 72, Florida State 60

Georgia Tech moves on to the second round of the ACC tournament after a 72-60 win over Florida State. The Yellow Jackets will face No. 6 Virginia Tech on Thursday. Georgia Tech, who was led by La’Nya Foster and her 18 points, shot 47% from the field. In addition to Foster’s contributions, it was sophomore guard Erica Moon who made several clutch baskets in the fourth quarter to help seal the win.

Florida State scored 21 points off 16 Yellow Jacket turnovers and had 34 bench points to Georgia Tech’s eight, but ultimately, the Yellow Jackets were too much for the team. Florida State, which finished the Wednesday match shooting 37%, was led by Sydney Bowles. Bowles was the lone player in double figures with 16 points.

Final: Indiana 72, Nebraska 69

Nebraska dominated early, using a 29-15 first quarter to stretch its double-digit lead into the third.

But the Hoosiers weren’t phased. Indiana, down 18 with five minutes left in the third quarter, went on a 10-0 run over three minutes. The Hoosiers took their first lead with less than one minute left in the game, then fended off multiple last-second Nebraska attempts to steal the game.

Indiana will play No. 5 Ohio State on Thursday at around 2:30 p.m. for a chance to advance to the quarterfinals. — Chloe Peterson

Indiana women’s basketball making a push

Indiana is making a late push against Nebraska in the fourth. The Hoosiers were down by as many as 15 points in the second quarter, but they’ve cut that deficit to as little as three points with six minutes left in the game.

Indiana has been able to limit Amiah Hargrove, who had 19 points in the first half but just two so far in the second, and Britt Prince, who has just five second-half points after 13 in the first half. — Chloe Peterson

Halftime: Nebraska 45, Indiana 28

Nebraska ran away early in this game, outscoring Indiana 29-15 in the first quarter. Indiana spent much of the second quarter trying to play catchup.

But the Hoosiers have been hampered by early foul trouble to three starters, as Shay Ciezki and Maya Makalusky each picked up two fouls in the first quarter. Ciezki led the Hoosiers with 11 points in the first half, while no other Indiana player had more than six.

Nebraska, on the other hand, has been firing on all cylinders. Amiah Hargrove had 19 points on 8-of-9 shooting in the first half, and Britt Prince had 13 points on 5-of-9 shooting. — Chloe Peterson

No. 12 Nebraska vs. No. 13 Indiana starting lineups

Nebraska starting lineup

Head coach: Amy Williams

  • 2 Logan Nissley | G
  • 14 Callin Hake | G
  • 23 Britt Prince | G
  • 4 Petra Bozan | F
  • 33 Amiah Hargrove | F

Indiana starting lineup

Head coach: Teri Moren

  • 2 Nevaeh Caffey | G
  • 5 Lenee Beaumont | G
  • 10 Shay Ciezki | G
  • 3 Maya Makalusky | F
  • 8 Edessa Noyan | F

Iowa hopes Hannah Stuelke can return

Iowa senior Hannah Stuelke, who missed the Hawkeyes’ win over Wisconsin on March 1 after suffering an elbow injury against Illinois three days prior, could return for the postseason. But Stuelke will have to clear a few hurdles.

‘It’s a pretty severe elbow injury — the torque of it, the swelling, the range of motion, the pain, the length of time that what really takes an injury like this one to feel better, better,’ Jensen told the Des Moines Register on Wednesday, two days before Iowa’s Big Ten Tournament opener. ‘So she has not practiced. We’re trying to figure out when to try it.

‘If she can go, I think she’ll go through that with some adrenaline. But it’s her strong hand, her dominant arm. So we’re just trying to give it as much rest to see what it feels like. But there’s a lot more than just the pain tolerance. If it can’t move, it can’t move. You can do some things with it. So we’re just trying to give it every minute.’ — Heather Burns

Georgia Tech goes coast-to-coast

Junior guard D’Asia Thomas-Harris built upon the Yellow Jackets’ promising outing against Florida State with a nifty steal-and-score that extended the team’s third-quarter lead to 14. — Meghan L. Hall

Halftime: Georgia Tech 39, Florida State 29

Georgia Tech leads Florida State, 39-29, after two quarters. Despite missing six players for Wednesday’s matchup, the Yellow Jackets have played with plenty of pace and space. They’re crashing the boards as they typically do and haven’t lost a step offensively despite some pressing defense from Florida State.

The Yellow Jackets shot 46% from the field, and on the other end of the ball, held Florida State to 35% shooting and just eight percent (1-of-12) from 3-point range. Georgia Tech also 80% from the line, while Florida State didn’t take or make a single free throw in the half.

The Yellow Jackets are led by La’Nya Foster, who has 13 points and five rebounds at the half. Sydney Bowles has 7 points for Florida State. — Meghan L. Hall

Cal coach gets 100th career win at ACC Tournament

During the first round of the ACC Tournament, Cal coach Charmin Smith earned her 100th career win after a 75-52 victory over Wake Forest

‘Really proud of our group today,’ Smith said postgame. ‘We settled in in the second quarter and were able to get a convincing win. All we want to do is just try to stay in Atlanta as long as possible. It’s a good day for the Bears.’ — Meghan L. Hall

Final: BYU 76, Houston 66

The game was tied at halftime, but BYU came out the locker room motivated and outscored Houston 27-15 in the third quarter to take a double-digit lead into the fourth quarter. BYU was able to hold off Houston for the win.

Olivia Hamlin led the way or BYU with 16 points off the bench, while Delaney Gibb and Lara Rohkohl each added 15 points. Meanwhile, Shun’teria Anumele had a game-high 17 points in the loss. — Cydney Henderson

No. 9 BYU vs. No. 16 Houston

BYU starting lineup

Head coach: Lee Cummard

  • 2 Sydney Benally | G 5-9 – Freshman
  • 11 Delaney Gibb | G 5-10 – Sophomore
  • 13 Lara Rohkohl | F 6-3 – Senior
  • 14 Kambree Barber | G 6-0 – Sophomore
  • 24 Brinley Cannon | G/F 6-1 -Sophomore

Houston Cougars starting lineup

Head coach: Matthew Mitchell

  • 26 Jorynn Ross | F 6-3 – Junior
  • 0 TK Pitts | G 6-1 – Senior
  • 1 Briana Peguero | G 5-7 – Senior
  • 7 Kyndall Hunter | G 5-7 – Senior
  • 14 Jade Jones | F 5-10 – Freshman

Big 12 court has flaw

The Big 12 women’s basketball tournament is being played on ASB GlassFloor LED court at the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Missouri. The state-of-the-art LED court, the same one used during 2024 NBA All-Star Game events, features visual effects, including dynamic court design, shot charts and immersive animations.

“Our team had the opportunity to practice on it back in November, and it was an incredible experience for our players,’ Baylor Women’s head coach Nicki Collen said in a statement.’The court is not only visually impressive, but it plays well and represents where our sport is headed.’

However, some eagle-eyed viewers have noticed at least one flaw. The half-court line is hard to see on the court due to the design. — Cydney Henderson

No. 10 Illinois women’s basketball vs. No. 15 Wisconsin

Illinois starting lineup

Head coach: Shauna Green

  • 1 Aaliyah Guyon | G 5-7 Sophomore
  • 2 Destiny Jackson | G 5-6 Freshman
  • 8 Jasmine Brown-Hagger | G 5-9 Junior
  • 23 Berry Wallace | F 6-1 Sophomore
  • 30 Cearah Parchment | F 6-3 Freshman

Wisconsin starting lineup

Head coach:Robin Pingeton

  • 1 Destiny Howell | G 6-0 Graduate Student
  • 13 Ronnie Porter | G 5-2 Senior
  • 15 Gift Uchenna | F 6-3 Senior
  • 20 Kyrah Daniels | G 6-0 Junior
  • 24 Laci Steele | G 5-11 Junior

Georgia Tech center splashes 3-pointer

Georgia Tech center Ariadna Termis showed no fear when she was passed the ball. Termis sank a beautiful 3-pointer in the first quarter, something you don’t see as often from those who play the position. — Meghan L. Hall

Georgia Tech injury report

Georgia Tech will be without six players when it takes on Florida State during the first round of the ACC Tournament later Wednesday. The following players are out:

  • #1 McKayla Taylor | C 6-1 – Freshman
  • #4 Leyre Urdiain | G 5-11 – Freshman
  • #12 Jada Crawshaw | F 6-0 – Junior
  • #13 Deborah Mukeba | C 6-5 – Sophomore
  • #22 Ines Noguero | G 5-11 – Senior
  • #33 Savannah Samuel | G 6-1 – Senio

UCLA’s Lauren Betts performs halftime show

UCLA women’s basketball doesn’t tip off its postseason until the Big Ten Tournament quarterfinal round on Friday, but some players are already dancing.

Charlisse Leger-Walker, Lauren Betts and Gabriela Jaquez joined UCLA cheerleaders for a special halftime performance to Tate McRae’s ‘Just Keep Watching’ during UCLA men’s 72-52 win over Nebraska on Tuesday.

— Cydney Henderson

Wake Forest ‘nervous’ in Cal matchup

Wednesday’s matchup against the Cal Golden Bears did not go as Wake Forest hoped. The Deamon Deacons fell 75-52. Head coach Megan Gebbia said postgame she believed nerves played a factor.

Wake Forest only has one player on its roster who had been to the ACC Tournament before this season, plus four transfers, including Cal Poly’s Mary Carter. On Wednesday, Carter led Wake Forest with 13 points.

‘I felt like we were a little nervous early on. I had to go in at halftime and say, ‘Shoot when you’re open,” Gebbia said. ‘As a coach, you don’t want to have to say that at halftime to some of the players that I felt were playing a little tentative. You have to come out with a lot of energy and a lot of effort and just confidence in yourself.’It’s unfortunate that it had to be this type of loss I would have liked for it to be a little bit closer, but the lesson is it’s a 40-minute game.’ — Meghan L. Hall

Final: Florida 86, Mississippi State 68

Me’Arah O’Neal and Liv McGill each scored 22 points apiece as the Gators kept their postseason alive with a win over the Bulldogs on Wednesday in the opening round of the SEC Tournament in Greenville, South Carolina.

It’s the fifth time O’Neal, a sophomore and the daughter of NBA legend Shaquille O’Neal, has scored north of 20 points. She also added four rebounds for Florida (18-14), while McGill had seven rebounds and 10 assists.

Destiney McPhaul and Favour Nwaedozi paced Mississippi State (18-13) with 12 points apiece in the fifth consecutive loss for the Bulldogs. Sam Purcell’s team is now at the mercy of the NCAA Tournament Selection Committee when it comes to March Madness inclusion. The Bulldogs end the regular season with a 2-9 record in Quad 1 games and a 1-3 record in Quad 2 games.

Florida will face No. 6 Oklahoma on Thursday at 1:30 p.m. ET on the SEC Network. — Mitchell Northam

Final: California 75, Wake Forest 52

Cal led 32-21 in the first half and outscored Wake Forest 29-12 in the third period and ran away with the win. By the time the fourth quarter arrived, the lead had ballooned to as high as 29 points. Cal will play No. 7 Syracuse in the second round of the ACC Tournament.

The Golden Bears shot 44% from the field and held the lead for 35 minutes, 46 seconds. Calwas led by Sakima Walker, who finished her day with 17 points and 10 rebounds. The Golden Bears also added 19 points from their bench on Wednesday, which is noteworthy.

Wake Forest, which shot 38% from the field, was led by Mary Carter. Carter was one of two Demon Deacons who finished in double figures The Wake Forest guard finished with 13 points and five rebounds. — Meghan L. Hall

8 players ejected at Sun Belt Tournament

Eight players were ejected from a second round game in the Sun Belt Women’s Basketball Tournament in Pensacola, Florida, on Wednesday afternoon after a fight broke out between No. 9 Coastal Carolina and No. 12 South Alabama.

South Alabama led by nine points with about 5:39 remaining in the fourth quarter when a scuffle ensued between Cordasia Harris of South Alabama and Tracey Hueston of Coastal Carolina. Coaches and players from the benches spilled out onto the floor and one referee was caught in the crossfire, hitting the floor after taking a hit from a player. Read more here. — Mitchell Northam

Halftime: BYU 29, Houston 29

The first-round matchup between BYU and Houston, the Battle of the Cougars, has proved to be a low-scoring affair so far and we’re all tied up at halftime. 

Neither team is shooting particularly well. BYU is 9-of-23 (39%) from the field, while Houston is 10-of-33 (30%) from the field.

BYU’s Delaney Gibb leads all scorers with 11 points and four rebounds. Sydney Benally has five points, while Lara Rohkohl has four points. However, BYU has given up 15 turnovers that have kept Houston in the game. 

Jade Jones and Kierra Merchant each have seven points for Houston. — Cydney Henderson

Halftime: Florida 46, Mississippi State 30

Me’Arah O’Neal — yes, the daughter of NBA legend Shaquille O’Neal — is powering the Gators in the first half with 15 points on 5-of-10 shooting from the floor and 3-of-5 from 3-point land. Florida has also scored 14 points off 12 turnovers by the Bulldogs, while Mississippi State has two points from nine turnovers by the Gators.

NCAA Tournament hopes for both teams hinge on the outcome of this game. Mississippi State is in a better position on the bubble currently with a NET of 39, but would feel more optimistic about its prospects of cracking the field of 68 with a win here. Florida likely needs to win multiple games in Greenville, South Carolina this week to get in a bubble position. Mitchell Northam

Cal forward exits with injury

Cal forward Claudia Langarita, a starter for the Golden Bears, exited the second quarter of Wednesday’s matchup with Wake Forest with 9:41 remaining in the period. It’s unclear how Langarita was hurt, but she went down and stayed down for several moments before being helped off the court by nearby training staff.

Langarita attempted to stretch her out to the side, but she ultimately went back to the locker room. The Cal forward had a visible limp and appeared to be rubbing her right hip.

Langaratia emerged from the locker room minutes later, standing behind the Cal bench with a heat wrap on her back. She eventually sat down on the bench with just under three minutes left in the period, but did not return to action before the half. — Meghan L. Hall

Wake Forest and Cal struggle to score

In the opening quarter of Wake Forest and Cal’s matchup, neither team could get many shots to fall. Wake Forest shot 31% from the field and Cal shot 24%. Both teams made four field goals. Cal leads 11-10 over Wake Forest. — Meghan L. Hall

Final: Kansas State 91, Cincinnati 66

No. 12 Kansas State cruised to the second round of the Big 12 women’s basketball tournament following a dominant 25-point win over No. 13 Cincinnati, where the Wildcats shot a whopping 53% from the 3-point line.

Taryn Sides (20 pts) and Jordan Speiser (20) combined for eleven of Kansas State’s 17 made 3-pointers, which set a Big 12 Tournament record. Nastja Claessens made five 3-pointers and finished with 18 points in the win.

Mya Perry led Cincinnati with 23 points (7-of-19 FG, 4-of-7) and was in tears when she checked out of the final game of her college career. Perry put her jersey over her face as head coach Katrina Merriweather tried to console her.

Florida out in front early

The Gators are off to a quick and balanced start with four of their five starters scoring to build a 10-4 lead halfway through the first quarter.

Neither team is shooting particularly well with Mississippi State hitting 33% of its shots from the field and Florida 30%.

No. 13 Mississippi State vs. No. 12 Florida

Mississippi State Bulldogs starting lineup

Head coach: Sam Purcell

  • 4 Tryanna Crisp | G 5-8 – Senior
  • 5 Chandler Prater | G/F 5-10 – Senior
  • 25 Favour Nwaedozi | F 6-3 – Junior
  • 33 Kharyssa Richardson | F 6-2 Senior
  • 40 Madison Francis | F 6-2 – Freshman

Florida Gators starting lineup

Head coach: Kelly Rae Finley

  • 13 Laila Reynolds | G 6-1 – Junior
  • 23 Liv McGill | G 5-9 – Sophomore
  • 8 Me’Arah O’Neal | F 6-4 – Sophomore
  • 9 Alexa Dizeko | F 5-111- Senior
  • 14 Caterina Piatti | F 6-4 – Freshman

No. 12 Miami vs No. 13 Stanford

Final: Miami 83, Stanford 76 (OT)

Stanford tried to continue its push in overtime, but ultimately ran out of steam. Miami moves on into the second round of the ACC Tournament with an 83-76 win. The Hurricanes will play No. 5 Notre Dame next.

Miami finished shooting 51% from the field, with three scorers in double digits, including Ra Shaya Kyler, who had a double-double with 24 points and 11 rebounds, and Gal Raviv, who had 20 points, six rebounds and six assists.

Stanford shot 43% from the field and 44% from deep behind 12 3-pointers.. Courtney Ogden led the Cardinal with 22 points. — Meghan L. Hall

Stanford and Miami go to overtime

Miami led 65-52 after three quarters (and by as much as eight in the waning minutes of the fourth), but Stanford forced several Hurricane turnovers that helped the Cardinal climb back into the game. Stanford switched to a zone defense and that made the difference.

Stanford’s Courtney Ogden cashed in on five straight points with less than a minute remaining to tie the game up at 70 and force overtime. Ogden has 22 points on the day.

Miami pulling away

With about five minutes left in the third quarter, the game was tied at 49. However, Miami turned up the heat. The Hurricanes finished the period on a 16-3 run, punctuated by a deep 3-pointer from Natalie Wetzel to close the quarter. Wetzel’s 3-pointer pushed Miami’s lead to 13.

Stanford and Miami trading baskets

At the halfway point of the third quarter, the Cardinal and Hurricanes are trading 3-pointers and baskets in the paint. The defense has intensified and so has the scoring.

Stanford has a 51-49 lead with 4:49 left in the third, led by 14 points from Hailee Swain. Ra Shaya Kyle has 17 for Miami.

Halftime: Stanford 39, Miami 37

With Stanford’s season and NCAA Tournament dreams seemingly hanging in the balance against Miami, the Cardinal survived an early surge from the Hurricanes. After a 19-10 first quarter from Miami, it was all Stanford in the second quarter. The Cardinal took the period 29-18.

Miami’s Gal Raviv leads all scorers with 12 points. Hailee Swain and Courtney Ogden both have 11 points for Stanford. — Meghan L. Hall

Stanford on an 18-11 run

After trailing 19-10 after the first quarter, Stanford went on an 18-11 run to cut Miami’s nine-point lead to 2 points with 3:39 remaining in the half. Courtney Ogden leads Stanford with 11 points. The Cardinal have NCAA Tournament hopes hanging in the balance as one of the first four out in USA TODAY Sports latest bracketology. — Meghan L. Hall

Miami Hurricanes starting lineup

Head coach: Tricia Cullop

  • 0 Ra Shaya Kyle | C 6-5 – Senior
  • 33 Amarachi Kimpson | G 5-8 – Junior
  • 12 Natalie Wetzel | F 6-3 – Freshman
  • 5 Ahnay Adams | G 5-6 – Sophomore
  • 14 Gal Raviv | G 5-9 – Sophomore

Stanford Cardinal starting lineup

Head coach: Kate Paye

  • 2 Hailee Swain | G 5-11 – Freshman
  • 6 Shay Ijiwoye | G 5-6 – Sophomore
  • 40 Courtney Ogden | F 6-1 – Junior
  • 12 Lara Somfai | F 6-3 – Freshman
  • 3 Nunu Agara | F 6’2 – Junior

No. 12 Kansas State vs. No. 13 Cincinnati

Halftime: Kansas State 40, Cincinnati 29

It’s raining 3-pointers in Kansas City. Kansas State (8-of-15) and Cincinnati (4-of-8) are shooting over 50% from beyond the arc in the first round of the Big 12 Tournament, but the Wildcats have an eleven-point edge heading into halftime.

Nastja Claessens (12 points) and Taryn Sides (11 points) combined for six of Kansas State’s eight 3-pointers.

Cincinnati is outrebounding Kansas State 27-18, including 10 offensive rebounds, yet find themselves down double-digits because of turnovers. The Bearcats have given up 13 turnovers, which Kansas State converted to nine points. Mya Perry has a team-high nine points (3-of-5 from 3) for Cincinnati. — Cydney Henderson

Kansas State Wildcats starting lineup

Head coach: Jeff Mittie

  • 3 Brandie Harrod | G 6-1 – Freshman
  • 4 Nastja Claessens | F 6-1 – Junior
  • 6 Gina Garcia | G 5-10 – Freshman
  • 11 Taryn Sides  | G 5-7 – Junior
  • 34 Tess Heal | G 5-10 – Senior

Cincinnati Bearcats starting lineup

Head coach: Katrina Merriweather

  • 1 Mya Perry | G 5-11 – Senior
  • 3 Reagan Jackson | G 5-8 – Junior
  • 4 Caliyah DeVillasee | G 5-8 – Freshman
  • 10 Kylie Torrence | F 6-2 – Freshman
  • 32 Destiny Thomas | C 6-4 -Junior

No. 16 Arkansas vs. No. 9 Kentucky

Final: Kentucky 94, Arkansas 64

The Wildcats outscored the Razorbacks 29-10 in the third quarter and never looked back. Kentucky outrebounded Arkansas 35-20 and outscored them in the paint 40-30.

Although the Razorbacks were perfect on 10 3s, the Wildcats were 16 for 22 from behind the arc to keep pace.

Kentucky had six players in double figures including all of their starters. Carla Strack had a double-double with 20 points and 13 rebounds. Amelia Hassett added 18 points on 6-of-11 from behind the arc.

Kentucky faces Georgia in the tournament quarterfinals at 11 a.m. ET on Thursday (SEC Network).

Tonie Morgan pacing Kentucky run

Tonie Morgan has more points than the entire Arkansas team in the third quarter. The senior has scored 12 with six rebounds. The Wildcats now have four players in double figures and lead 70-43. The Razorbacks season looks to be coming to an end.

Kentucky taking charge

The Wildcats have gone on a 12-2 run to start the third quarter and their lead has ballooned back to 19 points. Amelia Hassett made her fifth 3-pointer to trigger an Arkansas timeout. Clara Strack has a double-double for Kentucky with 14 points and 11 rebounds.

Halftime: Kentucky 42, Arkansas 33

The Razorbacks closed out the first half on a 15-4 run to get back within single digits of the No. 19-ranked Wildcats. Arkansas is outscoring Kentucky 18-12 in the paint. Taleyah Jones has 12 points to lead the Razorbacks.

Amelia Hassett has 12 points and Clara Strack 11 points and eight rebounds for Kentucky, which had led by as many as 20 points. — Heather Burns

Arkansas trying to claw back

The Razorbacks have outscored the Wildcats 23-13 in the second quarter. Emily Robinson has eight points including two 3-pointers. Taleyah Jones has 12 points, two rebounds and two assists.

Kentucky on a 7-0 run

The Wildcats have jumped out to a 16-4 lead early after a 7-0 run against Arkansas. Asia Boone leads Kentucky with six points on a pair of 3-pointers. — Heather Burns

Arkansas Razorbacks starting lineup

Head coach: Kelsi Musick

  • 11 Wyette Mayberry | G 5-7 – Senior
  • 22 Bonnie Deas | G 5-9 – Freshman
  • 10 Taleyah Jones | G 5-10 – Senior
  • 21 Ashlynn Chlarson | C 6-3 – Junior
  • 23 Emily Robinson | G 5-10 – Junior

Kentucky starting lineup

Head coach: Kenny Brooks

  • 5 Tonie Morgan | G 5-9 – Senior
  • 7 Teonnie Key | F 6-5 – Senior
  • 8 Asia Boone | G 5-8 – Junior
  • 13 Clara Strack | C 6-5 – Junior
  • 32 Amelia Hassett | F 6-4 -Senior

SEC women’s basketball tournament bracket

Women’s college basketball bracketology

Conference tournaments begin Wednesday in women’s college basketball for a handful of leagues, including the ACC, SEC, Big Ten, Big 12, Big East, Atlantic 10 and Summit.

It’s possible a lot of the projections will change by the time USA Today Sports rolls out another bracketology next week as teams will play in high-stakes games against marquee in-conference opponents on neutral courts. Up for grabs are a few undecided spots in the top 16 and positioning on the bubble. Read more.

Big 12 women’s basketball tournament schedule today

All times Eastern

Wednesday, March 4

First Round

  • Game 1: No. 12 Kansas State 91, No. 13 Cincinnati 66
  • Game 2: No. 9 BYU 76, No. 16 Houston 66
  • Game 3: No. 10 Arizona State vs. No. 15 Arizona | 6:30 p.m. (ESPN+)
  • Game 4: No. 11 Kansas vs. No. 14 UCF | 9 p.m. (ESPN+)

Big 12 women’s basketball tournament bracket

SEC women’s basketball tournament schedule today

All times Eastern

Wednesday, March 4 – First round

  • Game 1: #16 Arkansas vs. #9 Kentucky | 11 a.m. ET (SEC Network)
  • Game 2: #13 Mississippi State vs. #12 Florida | 1:30 p.m. ET (SEC Network)
  • Game 3: #15 Auburn vs. #10 Texas A&M | 6 p.m. ET (SEC Network)
  • Game 4: #14 Missouri vs. #11 Alabama | 8:30 p.m. ET (SEC Network)

SEC women’s basketball tournament bracket

Ranking March Madness top players

The 2025-26 women’s college basketball regular season is over for the Power 4 conferences and a handful of players rose to the top ahead of the 2026 NCAA Tournament.

UConn’s Sarah Strong and Azzi Fudd are among the top players set to tipoff March Madness later this month. USA TODAY Sports ranked the top 10 players in women’s college basketball ahead of the conference tournaments that begin Wednesday, March 4, for the Power 4. Read more.

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This post appeared first on USA TODAY

College football lost a legendary coach when Lou Holtz, most known as a former Notre Dame coach in addition to preeminent college football pundit, died on Wednesday, March 4.

Holtz, 89, died after being placed in hospice care on Thursday, Jan. 29. He will be remembered most recently for being an analyst on ESPN for college football.

But for older college football fans, he will be remembered for coaching the storied Fighting Irish to their last national championship, coming in 1988.

Here’s a look at highlights from Holtz’s Hall of Fame College Football coaching career:

Lou Holtz hired at William & Mary

After helping Ohio State win a national championship as an assistant coach in 1968, Holtz landed his first head coaching job. He was hired by William & Mary in 1969.

He led the then-Indians (now the Tribe) to a Southern Conference title in 1970 and a berth in the Tangerine Bowl. Overall, he had a 13-20 record with William & Mary, including a 9-4 record in conference play.

North Carolina State

Following his successful stint with William & Mary, Holtz earned his first FBS job when he was hired by NC State in 1972. After winning just three games in three consecutive seasons, Holtz led the Wolf Pack to three straight top 20 rankings, which included a top-10 finish in the Coaches poll in 1974.

Overall, he achieved a 33-12-3 record, with a 16-5-2 record in ACC play, including the ACC championship in 1973. His teams went 2-1-1 in bowl games.

New York Jets, NFL

On Feb. 10, 1976, Holtz made a move to the pros, taking a job as the head coach of the New York Jets. However, his one-and-only year in the NFL did not go well. He led the Jets to a 3-10 record, resigning with one game left in the season.

Upon his departure from New York, Holtz commented: ‘God did not put Lou Holtz on this earth to coach in the pros.’

Hired at Arkansas, wins Paul ‘Bear’ Bryant Coach of Year Award

Holtz’s departure from college coaching was a brief one. After one season in the NFL, he was hired by Arkansas in 1977. He coached the Razorbacks to a 60-21-2 record over seven seasons, including a berth in six bowl games.

In his very first season, Holtz led Arkansas to a 31-6 win over Oklahoma in the 1978 Orange Bowl. In 1979, Holtz was a candidate to replace Woody Hayes as the Ohio State head coach, but ultimately turned it down, not wanting to follow Hayes.

Following a 6-5 record in 1983, Holtz was fired by the Razorbacks.

Hired at Minnesota

In 1984, one year after his firing from Arkansas, Minnesota hired Holtz before the 1984 season. The Golden Gophers were coming off a one-win season in 1983. In Holtz’s first year, they won four games, including three in Big Ten play.

Holtz led Minnesota to an Independence Bowl berth in 1984. However, Holtz did not coach in that game, as he had at the time already accepted the job to become the next Notre Dame football head coach.

Lou Holtz hired at Notre Dame

Holtz was hired by Notre Dame in 1986 following a 30-26-1 mark under Gerry Faust between 1981-85. Holtz removed the names from the back of the Notre Dame uniforms to emphasize teamwork over individuals.

He led the Fighting Irish to a 5-6 record in 1986, but five of the six losses came within a combined 14 points. They ended the season with a 38-37 comeback win over USC, which saw them down by as many as 17 points in the fourth quarter.

The team went 8-4 in 1987, earning a berth in the Cotton Bowl. That set the stage for the 1988 season.

1988 national championship

Holtz’s signature season as a head coach came in 1988, leading Notre Dame to a 34-21 win over West Virginia in the Fiesta Bowl, to claim the program’s 11th national championship.

On Oct. 15, 1988, the Fighting Irish defeated Miami to end their 36-game winning streak. That game is remembered as the ‘Catholics vs. Convicts’ game in pop culture today. The Hurricanes were the defending national champions and ranked No. 1 at the time.

Notre Dame also had wins over No. 9 Michigan, No. 2 USC and No. 3 West Virginia en route to the 12-0 national championship season.

Retirement from Notre Dame

Following an 11-year run with Notre Dame, Holtz announced his retirement from coaching after the 1996 season. He finished his career with the Fighting Irish with a 100-32-2 record. Particularly, he posted a 64-9-1 record between 1988 and 1993. Overall, Holtz led Notre Dame to nine consecutive bowls, which is still the school record.

Notre Dame began the 1989 season with 11 straight wins before losing to Miami in the regular-season finale. The 23 wins in a row are a school record. The Fighting Irish defeated Colorado 21-6 in the Orange Bowl to finish second in the polls. They also finished second in the polls in 1993, behind Florida State.

Out of retirement to coach South Carolina

Following a two-year stint with CBS Sports as a commentator, Holtz decided to come out of retirement in 1999 and was hired by South Carolina. He had served as an assistant coach for the Gamecocks in the 1960s.

Holtz and the Gamecocks went 0-11 in 1999 in his first season, but the program had just one win in 1998. He led USC to a 19-7 combined record in 2000 and 2001, including back-to-back wins in the Outback Bowl.

Second retirement from South Carolina

The Gamecocks went 5-7 in consecutive seasons in 2002 and 2003 before Holtz ended his tenure with a winning 6-5 record in 2004. A major brawl with Clemson broke out in Holtz’s final game with South Carolina.

In 2005, the NCAA put South Carolina on probation for three years after 10 admitted violations under Holtz, including five of which were considered to be major.

‘There was no money involved. No athletes were paid. There were no recruiting inducements. No cars. No jobs offered. No ticket scandal, etc,’ Holtz said after the sanctions were handed down.

‘There were five major violations, and four of them involved our academic office. Concerning these four violations, you will have to consult the university.

Elected to College Football Hall of Fame

Holtz was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2008. Along with the 1988 national championship, he finished his coaching career with 249 wins over 35 years with six different schools.

He was joined by Billy Cannon and Troy Aikman in the 15-person calls in 2008.

Lou Holtz awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom

On Dec. 3, 2020, Preisdent Dondald Trump awarded Holtz the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

‘America recognizes Lou Holtz as one of the greatest football coaches of all time for his unmatched accomplishments on the gridiron, but he is also a philanthropist, author, and true American patriot,’ the White House press release said. After growing up in a small town in West Virginia, Holtz attended Kent State University, becoming the first member of his family to enroll in college. At Kent State, Holtz played football, studied history, and joined the Army Reserve Officers’ Training Corps.

‘For the next 7 years, he honorably served as an Officer in the United States Army Reserves. When asked about his service during an interview with the American Legion, Holtz said, “I was taught at an early age that I had an obligation to serve my country.”

Lou Holtz beef with Ryan Day

In 2023, ahead of an Ohio State-Notre Dame matchup, Holtz called the Buckeyes and their head coach Ryan Day, ‘too soft.’

“He has lost to Alabama, Georgia, Clemson, Michigan twice — and everybody who beats them does so because they’re more physical than Ohio State,” Holtz said in 2023. “I think Notre Dame will take that same approach.”

Ohio State, of course, earned a 17-14 win over Notre Dame, and Day was quick to call out Holtz after the game.

“I’d like to know where Lou Holtz is right now,” Day said postgame to NBC Sports. “What he said about our team, I cannot believe. This is a tough team right here. We’re proud to be from Ohio. It’s always been Ohio against the world, and it’ll continue to be Ohio against the world.’

Lou Holtz coaching career record

  • 1969: William & Mary, 3-7
  • 1970: William & Mary, 5-7
  • 1971: William & Mary, 5-6
  • 1972: NC State, 8-3-1
  • 1973: NC State, 9-3
  • 1974: NC State, 9-2-1
  • 1975: NC State, 7-4-1
  • 1977: Arkansas, 11-1
  • 1978: Arkansas, 9-2-1
  • 1979: Arkansas, 10-2
  • 1980: Arkansas, 7-5
  • 1981: Arkansas, 8-4
  • 1982: Arkansas: 9-2-1
  • 1983: Arkansas, 6-5
  • 1984: Minnesota, 4-7
  • 1985: Minnesota, 6-5
  • 1986: Notre Dame, 5-6
  • 1987: Notre Dame, 8-4
  • 1988: Notre Dame, 12-0
  • 1989: Notre Dame, 12-1
  • 1990: Notre Dame, 9-3
  • 1991: Notre Dame, 10-3
  • 1992: Notre Dame: 10-1-1
  • 1993: Notre Dame, 11-1
  • 1994: Notre Dame: 6-5-1
  • 1995: Notre Dame, 9-3
  • 1996: Notre Dame, 8-3
  • 1999: South Carolina, 0-11
  • 2000: South Carolina, 8-4
  • 2001: South Carolina, 9-3
  • 2002: South Carolina, 5-7
  • 2003: South Carolina, 5-7
  • 2004: South Carolina, 6-5
  • TOTAL: 33 seasons, 249-132-7 (.651)
This post appeared first on USA TODAY

It’s almost dancing time.

As everyone flips their calendars to March, the countdown to women college basketball’s 2026 NCAA Tournament is officially on. Before March Madness begins on March 18, the participants must be determined. And the first spots are up for grabs as conference tournaments kick off around the nation on Wednesday.

South Carolina (SEC), UCLA (Big Ten), Duke (ACC) and TCU (Big 12) each earned No. 1 seeds and double-byes in their respective conferences and have the easiest path to winning their postseason tournaments. All four teams won their conference tournament last season and are looking to repeat.

The winners of the conference tournaments earn an automatic bid into March Madness. Every other team will have to sweat it out on Selection Sunday on March 15 to see if they received at-large bid.

USA TODAY Sports is following along with the Power Four conference tournaments. Follow along for live updates, highlights and results here:

Final: Oregon 82, Purdue 64

Oregon built up a 23-point lead in the first half and never surrendered. Purdue attempted to mount a comeback in the second half, getting the deficit down to 12 points in the fourth quarter, but it wasn’t enough.

Purdue and Oregon each had 25 made field goals in the game, and the Boilermakers had eight 3-pointers compared to the Ducks’ five.  What put Oregon over the edge was the free throw disparity: Oregon went 27-of-29 from the line, accounting for one-third of its points, while Purdue went just 6-of-13. Three Boilermakers fouled out in the fourth quarter.

Katie Fiso led Oregon with 20 points on 7-of-14 shooting, including a 6-of-7 from the free throw line. Ehis Etute had a double-double for the Ducks, putting up 16 points and 12 rebounds.

No. 11 Oregon will advance to play No. 6 Maryland on Thursday at approximately 9 p.m.

Final: Alabama 65, Missouri 48

Ace Austin scored 14 points and was one of four Alabama players to score in double figures as the No. 11 Crimson Tide beat the No. 14 Tigers on Wednesday night at the SEC Tournament in Greenville, South Carolina.

Alabama (22-9) also got 13 points from Diana Collins, 12 points from Ta’Mia Scott and 10 points from Essence Cody. Karly Weathers also grabbed a game-high 16 rebounds.

Jordana Reisma paced Missouri (16-16) with 15 points, while Grace Slaughter had a double-double of 11 points and 11 rebounds.

Alabama grabbed 14 offensive rebounds and turned them into 23 points. The Crimson Tide outscored the Tigers 24-11 in the fourth quarter to pull away.

The Crimson Tide will face No. 6 Tennessee at 8:30 p.m. ET on Thursday on the SEC Network. −Mitchell Northam

Halftime: Kansas 27, UCF 19

Kansas women’s basketball has a 10-point lead over UCF heading into halftime.

The Jayhawks’ bench has kept Kansas in the driver’s seat, outscoring the starters 16-11. Brittany Harshaw has six points off the bench, while Jaliya Davis added six points and two assists.

UCF shot 26% from the field and was kept off the free throw line in the first half. Jacorriah Bracey has a team-high six points for UCF. − Cydney Henderson

No. 11 Kansas vs. No. 14 UCF , 9 p.m. | (ESPN+)

UCF starting lineup

Head coach: Sytia Messer

  • 2 Kristol Ayson | G 5’9 – Senior
  • 3 Jacorriah Bracey | G 5’9 – Senior
  • 13 Summer Yancy | G/F 5’11 – Sophomore
  • 33 Mahogany Chandler-Roberts | F 6’2 – Sophomore
  • 35 Khyala Ngodu | C 6’3 – Junior

Kansas starting lineup

Head coach: Brandon Schneider

12 S’Mya Nichols | G 6’0 – Junior

13 Libby Fandel | G 6-1 – Freshman

22 Sania Copeland | G 5-7 – Senior

25 Jaliya Davis | F 6-2 – Freshman

52 Lilly Meister | F 6-3 – Senior

Halftime: Alabama 31, Missouri 20

Behind 10 points from Essence Cody, the No. 11 Crimson Tide led the No. 14 Tigers at the break in the final game on the opening day of the SEC Tournament in Greenville, South Carolina.

Alabama knocked down five 3-pointers in the first half, and turned six offensive rebounds into nine second-chance points. Sitting courtside supporting the Crimson Tide is Sarah Ashlee Barker, a former two-time All-SEC selection who was picked in the first round of the WNBA Draft last spring by the LA Sparks.

The winner of this game will face No. 6 Tennessee at 8:30 p.m. ET on Thursday on the SEC Network. −Mitchell Northam

Halftime: Oregon 47, Purdue 24

Oregon methodically built up its lead in the second quarter, outscoring Purdue 26-12 to go into halftime with a 23-point advantage. Oregon finished the second quarter on a 6-0 run, holding Purdue to a two-minute scoring drought.

The Ducks have dominated inside, with 22 points in the paint and 16 second-chance points off seven offensive rebounds. Purdue has eight offensive rebounds, but hasn’t been able to capitalize with seven second-chance points. 

Ehis Etute is leading Oregon with 12 points and eight rebounds in just 11 minutes of play. − Chloe Henderson

Final: Arizona State 54, Arizona 51

The victory marked the third time the Sun Devils have defeated the Wildcats this season.

Heloisa Carrera has 16 points for the Sun Devils, who got points from every one of the nine players that saw the court. Arizona State shot 40% from the field and dominated the paint, outscoring Arizona 36-18.

Daniah Trammell and Sumayah Sugapong each had 12 points for Arizona.

It wasn’t a clean game by either team. Arizona State (20) and Arizona (18) combined for 38 turnovers. — Cydney Henderson

#14 Missouri vs. #11 Alabama, 8:30 p.m. ET | SEC Network

Missouri starting lineup

Head coach: Kelli Harper

  • 10 Jordana Reisma | F 6-3 Senior
  • 22 Chloe Sotell | G 6-0 Sophomore
  • 1 Shannon Dowell | G 5-10 Junior
  • 23 Abbey Schreacke | G 6-0 Junior
  • 0 Grace Slaughter | G 6-2 Junior

Alabama starting lineup

Head coach: Kristy Curry

  • 21 Essence Cody | F 6-4 Junior
  • 20 Diana Collins | G 5-9 Junior
  • 15 Ta’Mia Scott | G 6-0 Senior
  • 22 Karly Weathers | G 5-11 Senior
  • 23 Jessica Timmons | G 5-8 Senior

No. 11 Oregon vs. No. 14 Purdue | 8:30 p.m., Peacock

Oregon starting lineup

Head coach: Kelly Graves

  • 2 Katie Fiso | G 5-11 Sophomore
  • 14 Ari Long | G  6-0 Junior
  • 3 Sofia Bell | G 6-0 Junior
  • 1 Mia Jacobs | F 6-2 Senior
  • 35 Ehis Etute | F 6-0 Freshman

Purdue starting lineup

Head coach: Katie Gearlds

  • 3 Nya Smith | G 5-9 Sophomore
  • 11 McKenna Layden | G 6-2 Junior
  • 23 Kiki Smith | G 5-7 Junior
  • 44 Tara Daye | G 5-10 Junior
  • 22 Kendall Puryear | F 6-3 Sophomore

Final: Auburn 50, Texas A&M 49

Khady Leye’s layup with 5.3 seconds to play lifted No. 15 Auburn to an upset win over No. 10 Texas A&M in the opening round of the SEC Tournament on Wednesday night in Greenville, South Carolina.

Leye finished with 11 points and a career-high 15 rebounds in the first SEC Tournament victory for the Tigers (15-16) under first-year coach Larry Vickers. Kaitlyn Duhon added 14 points for Auburn, while Harissoum Coulibaly chipped in 11.

Ny’Ceara Pryor powered the Aggies (14-12) with 25 points and four assists. The loss for Texas A&M snaps a five-game winning streak and likely ends their hopes of making the NCAA Tournament under fourth-year coach Joni Taylor.

The Aggies lost leading rebounder Fatmata Janneh to an apparent right knee injury just before halftime when she hit the floor hard after a foul. Janneh did not return to the game, but was seen near the Aggies bench in the fourth quarter using crutches.

Auburn will face No. 7 Ole Miss on Thursday at 6 p.m. ET on the SEC Network. −Mitchell Northam

Final: Illinois 82, Wisconsin 70

Illinois controlled from the beginning, and an early 10-0 run helped the Illini keep a safe distance from its border rival for the entire game.

Illinois heavily benefitted from the free throw line, going 24-of-29. That helped the Illini overcome a dismal 2-of-19 shooting from the 3-point line. Destiny Jackson led Illinois with 21 points on 5-of-8 shooting, including an 11-of-13 from the free throw line.

Wisconsin made 7 of its 11 shots from the free throw line and 8 of 21 free throws, but that wasn’t enough for the Badgers. Gift Uchenna led the Badgers with 26 points.

Illinois will advance the second round and play No. 7 Michigan on Thursday. −Chloe Peterson

Halftime: Arizona State 29, Arizona 28

Arizona State has a one-point advantage over Arizona heading into halftime of the first round matchup at the Big 12 women’s basketball tournament.

Buckets are hard to come by in the physical battle. The Sun Devils are shooting 13-of-29 from the field and have an edge in the paint, outscoring the Wildcats 18-6. Heloisa Carrera and Marley Washenitz each have eight points for Arizona State.

The Wildcats are shooting 11-of-30 from the field. Sumayah Sugapong leads Arizona with 10 points and three rebounds.

Arizona vs. Arizona State: Flagrant 1 foul called

Things are getting chippy between the in-state rivals. Arizona forward Nora Francois was called for a Flagrant 1 foul on Arizona State guard Marley Washenitz on a rebound attempt. Referees determined the contact was excessive, hard and unnecessary.

Wisconsin starter Destiny Howell leaves game with injury

Destiny Howell left the Wisconsin-Illinois game with an apparent leg injury in the third quarter. Howell was helped off the floor by Wisconsin’s trainers, briefly sat at the end of the bench, then walked to the locker room under her own power. She then returned to the bench later in the quarter.

Howell averages 14.1 points per game for the Badgers. She had four points on 1-of-5 shooting, along with three rebounds and two assists, at the time of her injury on Wednesday night. She returned to the game with five minutes left in the third quarter. −Chloe Peterson

Arizona State goes on 9-0 run vs. Arizona

A lot is riding on this matchup for Arizona State. The Sun Devils need a win to keep their March Madness hopes alive as one of the first four out in USA TODAY Sports latest bracketology. With the stakes high, Arizona State appeared to have early jitters. They started the game 2-of-7 from the field with four turnovers and quickly found themselves in 10-2 hole early against Arizona. But Arizona State went on a 9-0 run to take a 11-10 lead over Arizona. − Cydney Henderson

Texas A&M’s leading rebounder goes down with apparent knee injury

Seven seconds before halftime of Texas A&M’s opening round SEC Tournament game against Auburn, junior forward Fatmata Janneh was fouled and hit the floor hard. Bon Secours Wellness Arena went quiet as Janneh grabbed her right knee and screamed in pain.

Texas A&M head coach Joni Taylor and the team’s trainer rushed to the floor to console a visibly emotional Janneh. After a few minutes, Aggies assistant coach Darius Taylor and another staffer helped the 6-foot-2 forward off the floor, keeping her from putting any weight on her right leg.

At halftime, Texas A&M trailed 23-21 with Janneh contributing two points and three rebounds. On the season, the transfer from Saint Peter’s is averaging 12 points and 10.2 rebounds per game — one of five SEC players averaging a double-double this season. — Mitchell Northam

Halftime: No. 10 Illinois 41, No. 15 Wisconsin 33

Illinois used an early 10-0 run in the first quarter to take the lead two minutes into the game, and hasn’t relinquished it since. Berry Wallace is leading the Illini with 11 points.

Wisconsin has had trouble taking care of the ball, turning it over 12 times in the first half. That has led to 13 Illinois points off of those turnovers. — Chloe Peterson

No. 10 Arizona State vs. No. 15 Arizona

How to watch Arizona State vs. Arizona

The Battle of the desert tips off at 4:30 ET on ESPN+

Arizona State starting lineup

Head coach: Molly Miller

  • 0 Gabby Elliott | G 5-10 – Senior
  • 11 Marley Washenitz | G 5-7 – Senior
  • 13 Last-Tear Poa |  G 5-11 – Senior
  • 14 Heloisa Carrera | F 6-2 – Sophomore
  • 21 McKinna Brackens | F 6-1 – Junior

Arizona Wildcats starting lineup

Head coach: Becky Burke

  • 3 Sumayah Sugapong | F 5-7 – Junior
  • 4 Noelani Cornfield | G 5-6 – Senior
  • 11 Tanyuel Welch | G 5-10 – Junior
  • 13 Nora Francois | F 6-2 – Senior
  • 33 Daniah Trammell | F 6-1 – Freshman

Colorado extends coach JR Payne through 2031

Colorado enters the Big 12 Tournament this week hoping to secure the wins necessary to make what would be its fourth NCAA Tournament trip in five years. And the Buffs will keep around the coach that has guided them to the Big Dance for the long term.

JR Payne received a contract extension through 2031, Colorado announced Wednesday afternoon. Already in her 10th season at the helm of the Buffs, she is the second-longest tenured coach in program history.

Payne — who grew up in Vancouver, played at Saint Mary’s, and previously coached at Southern Utah and Santa Clara — took over at Colorado in 2016. She’s had just two losing seasons and has won at least 20 games in each of the last five years. With Jaylyn Sherrod leading the way, the Buffs went to the Sweet 16 in 2023 and 2024, snapping a two-decade drought for the program of not making the second weekend of March Madness.

Colorado will face the winner of UCF and Kansas in the Big 12 Tournament on Thursday night at 8 p.m. ET in Kansas City. — Mitchell Northam

No. 15 Auburn vs No. 10 Texas A&M

How to watch Auburn vs Texas A&M

The first-round matchup between Auburn and Texas A&M tips off 6 p.m. ET on SEC Network.

Auburn Tigers starting lineup

Head coach: Larry Vickers

  • 1 Mya Petticord | G 5-9 Senior
  • 2 Ja’Mia Harris | G 5-11 Junior
  • 3 Harissoum Coulibaly | G 5-10 Freshman
  • 4 Kaitlyn Duhon | G 5-10 Junior
  • 6 Khady Leye | F 6-2 Sophomore

Texas A&M Aggies starting lineup

Head coach: Joni Taylor

  • 1 Ny’Ceara Pryor | G 5-3 Senior
  • 10 Lemyah Hylton | G 5-11 Senior
  • 20 Janae Kent | G 6-1 Junior
  • 32 Lauren Ware | F 6-5 Graduate
  • 44 Fatmata Janneh | F 6-2 Junior

Final: Georgia Tech 72, Florida State 60

Georgia Tech moves on to the second round of the ACC tournament after a 72-60 win over Florida State. The Yellow Jackets will face No. 6 Virginia Tech on Thursday. Georgia Tech, who was led by La’Nya Foster and her 18 points, shot 47% from the field. In addition to Foster’s contributions, it was sophomore guard Erica Moon who made several clutch baskets in the fourth quarter to help seal the win.

Florida State scored 21 points off 16 Yellow Jacket turnovers and had 34 bench points to Georgia Tech’s eight, but ultimately, the Yellow Jackets were too much for the team. Florida State, which finished the Wednesday match shooting 37%, was led by Sydney Bowles. Bowles was the lone player in double figures with 16 points.

Final: Indiana 72, Nebraska 69

Nebraska dominated early, using a 29-15 first quarter to stretch its double-digit lead into the third.

But the Hoosiers weren’t phased. Indiana, down 18 with five minutes left in the third quarter, went on a 10-0 run over three minutes. The Hoosiers took their first lead with less than one minute left in the game, then fended off multiple last-second Nebraska attempts to steal the game.

Indiana will play No. 5 Ohio State on Thursday at around 2:30 p.m. for a chance to advance to the quarterfinals. — Chloe Peterson

Indiana women’s basketball making a push

Indiana is making a late push against Nebraska in the fourth. The Hoosiers were down by as many as 15 points in the second quarter, but they’ve cut that deficit to as little as three points with six minutes left in the game.

Indiana has been able to limit Amiah Hargrove, who had 19 points in the first half but just two so far in the second, and Britt Prince, who has just five second-half points after 13 in the first half. — Chloe Peterson

Halftime: Nebraska 45, Indiana 28

Nebraska ran away early in this game, outscoring Indiana 29-15 in the first quarter. Indiana spent much of the second quarter trying to play catchup.

But the Hoosiers have been hampered by early foul trouble to three starters, as Shay Ciezki and Maya Makalusky each picked up two fouls in the first quarter. Ciezki led the Hoosiers with 11 points in the first half, while no other Indiana player had more than six.

Nebraska, on the other hand, has been firing on all cylinders. Amiah Hargrove had 19 points on 8-of-9 shooting in the first half, and Britt Prince had 13 points on 5-of-9 shooting. — Chloe Peterson

No. 12 Nebraska vs. No. 13 Indiana starting lineups

Nebraska starting lineup

Head coach: Amy Williams

  • 2 Logan Nissley | G
  • 14 Callin Hake | G
  • 23 Britt Prince | G
  • 4 Petra Bozan | F
  • 33 Amiah Hargrove | F

Indiana starting lineup

Head coach: Teri Moren

  • 2 Nevaeh Caffey | G
  • 5 Lenee Beaumont | G
  • 10 Shay Ciezki | G
  • 3 Maya Makalusky | F
  • 8 Edessa Noyan | F

Iowa hopes Hannah Stuelke can return

Iowa senior Hannah Stuelke, who missed the Hawkeyes’ win over Wisconsin on March 1 after suffering an elbow injury against Illinois three days prior, could return for the postseason. But Stuelke will have to clear a few hurdles.

‘It’s a pretty severe elbow injury — the torque of it, the swelling, the range of motion, the pain, the length of time that what really takes an injury like this one to feel better, better,’ Jensen told the Des Moines Register on Wednesday, two days before Iowa’s Big Ten Tournament opener. ‘So she has not practiced. We’re trying to figure out when to try it.

‘If she can go, I think she’ll go through that with some adrenaline. But it’s her strong hand, her dominant arm. So we’re just trying to give it as much rest to see what it feels like. But there’s a lot more than just the pain tolerance. If it can’t move, it can’t move. You can do some things with it. So we’re just trying to give it every minute.’ — Heather Burns

Georgia Tech goes coast-to-coast

Junior guard D’Asia Thomas-Harris built upon the Yellow Jackets’ promising outing against Florida State with a nifty steal-and-score that extended the team’s third-quarter lead to 14. — Meghan L. Hall

Halftime: Georgia Tech 39, Florida State 29

Georgia Tech leads Florida State, 39-29, after two quarters. Despite missing six players for Wednesday’s matchup, the Yellow Jackets have played with plenty of pace and space. They’re crashing the boards as they typically do and haven’t lost a step offensively despite some pressing defense from Florida State.

The Yellow Jackets shot 46% from the field, and on the other end of the ball, held Florida State to 35% shooting and just eight percent (1-of-12) from 3-point range. Georgia Tech also 80% from the line, while Florida State didn’t take or make a single free throw in the half.

The Yellow Jackets are led by La’Nya Foster, who has 13 points and five rebounds at the half. Sydney Bowles has 7 points for Florida State. — Meghan L. Hall

Cal coach gets 100th career win at ACC Tournament

During the first round of the ACC Tournament, Cal coach Charmin Smith earned her 100th career win after a 75-52 victory over Wake Forest

‘Really proud of our group today,’ Smith said postgame. ‘We settled in in the second quarter and were able to get a convincing win. All we want to do is just try to stay in Atlanta as long as possible. It’s a good day for the Bears.’ — Meghan L. Hall

Final: BYU 76, Houston 66

The game was tied at halftime, but BYU came out the locker room motivated and outscored Houston 27-15 in the third quarter to take a double-digit lead into the fourth quarter. BYU was able to hold off Houston for the win.

Olivia Hamlin led the way or BYU with 16 points off the bench, while Delaney Gibb and Lara Rohkohl each added 15 points. Meanwhile, Shun’teria Anumele had a game-high 17 points in the loss. — Cydney Henderson

No. 9 BYU vs. No. 16 Houston

BYU starting lineup

Head coach: Lee Cummard

  • 2 Sydney Benally | G 5-9 – Freshman
  • 11 Delaney Gibb | G 5-10 – Sophomore
  • 13 Lara Rohkohl | F 6-3 – Senior
  • 14 Kambree Barber | G 6-0 – Sophomore
  • 24 Brinley Cannon | G/F 6-1 -Sophomore

Houston Cougars starting lineup

Head coach: Matthew Mitchell

  • 26 Jorynn Ross | F 6-3 – Junior
  • 0 TK Pitts | G 6-1 – Senior
  • 1 Briana Peguero | G 5-7 – Senior
  • 7 Kyndall Hunter | G 5-7 – Senior
  • 14 Jade Jones | F 5-10 – Freshman

Big 12 court has flaw

The Big 12 women’s basketball tournament is being played on ASB GlassFloor LED court at the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Missouri. The state-of-the-art LED court, the same one used during 2024 NBA All-Star Game events, features visual effects, including dynamic court design, shot charts and immersive animations.

“Our team had the opportunity to practice on it back in November, and it was an incredible experience for our players,’ Baylor Women’s head coach Nicki Collen said in a statement.’The court is not only visually impressive, but it plays well and represents where our sport is headed.’

However, some eagle-eyed viewers have noticed at least one flaw. The half-court line is hard to see on the court due to the design. — Cydney Henderson

No. 10 Illinois women’s basketball vs. No. 15 Wisconsin

Illinois starting lineup

Head coach: Shauna Green

  • 1 Aaliyah Guyon | G 5-7 Sophomore
  • 2 Destiny Jackson | G 5-6 Freshman
  • 8 Jasmine Brown-Hagger | G 5-9 Junior
  • 23 Berry Wallace | F 6-1 Sophomore
  • 30 Cearah Parchment | F 6-3 Freshman

Wisconsin starting lineup

Head coach:Robin Pingeton

  • 1 Destiny Howell | G 6-0 Graduate Student
  • 13 Ronnie Porter | G 5-2 Senior
  • 15 Gift Uchenna | F 6-3 Senior
  • 20 Kyrah Daniels | G 6-0 Junior
  • 24 Laci Steele | G 5-11 Junior

Georgia Tech center splashes 3-pointer

Georgia Tech center Ariadna Termis showed no fear when she was passed the ball. Termis sank a beautiful 3-pointer in the first quarter, something you don’t see as often from those who play the position. — Meghan L. Hall

Georgia Tech injury report

Georgia Tech will be without six players when it takes on Florida State during the first round of the ACC Tournament later Wednesday. The following players are out:

  • #1 McKayla Taylor | C 6-1 – Freshman
  • #4 Leyre Urdiain | G 5-11 – Freshman
  • #12 Jada Crawshaw | F 6-0 – Junior
  • #13 Deborah Mukeba | C 6-5 – Sophomore
  • #22 Ines Noguero | G 5-11 – Senior
  • #33 Savannah Samuel | G 6-1 – Senio

UCLA’s Lauren Betts performs halftime show

UCLA women’s basketball doesn’t tip off its postseason until the Big Ten Tournament quarterfinal round on Friday, but some players are already dancing.

Charlisse Leger-Walker, Lauren Betts and Gabriela Jaquez joined UCLA cheerleaders for a special halftime performance to Tate McRae’s ‘Just Keep Watching’ during UCLA men’s 72-52 win over Nebraska on Tuesday.

— Cydney Henderson

Wake Forest ‘nervous’ in Cal matchup

Wednesday’s matchup against the Cal Golden Bears did not go as Wake Forest hoped. The Deamon Deacons fell 75-52. Head coach Megan Gebbia said postgame she believed nerves played a factor.

Wake Forest only has one player on its roster who had been to the ACC Tournament before this season, plus four transfers, including Cal Poly’s Mary Carter. On Wednesday, Carter led Wake Forest with 13 points.

‘I felt like we were a little nervous early on. I had to go in at halftime and say, ‘Shoot when you’re open,” Gebbia said. ‘As a coach, you don’t want to have to say that at halftime to some of the players that I felt were playing a little tentative. You have to come out with a lot of energy and a lot of effort and just confidence in yourself.’It’s unfortunate that it had to be this type of loss I would have liked for it to be a little bit closer, but the lesson is it’s a 40-minute game.’ — Meghan L. Hall

Final: Florida 86, Mississippi State 68

Me’Arah O’Neal and Liv McGill each scored 22 points apiece as the Gators kept their postseason alive with a win over the Bulldogs on Wednesday in the opening round of the SEC Tournament in Greenville, South Carolina.

It’s the fifth time O’Neal, a sophomore and the daughter of NBA legend Shaquille O’Neal, has scored north of 20 points. She also added four rebounds for Florida (18-14), while McGill had seven rebounds and 10 assists.

Destiney McPhaul and Favour Nwaedozi paced Mississippi State (18-13) with 12 points apiece in the fifth consecutive loss for the Bulldogs. Sam Purcell’s team is now at the mercy of the NCAA Tournament Selection Committee when it comes to March Madness inclusion. The Bulldogs end the regular season with a 2-9 record in Quad 1 games and a 1-3 record in Quad 2 games.

Florida will face No. 6 Oklahoma on Thursday at 1:30 p.m. ET on the SEC Network. — Mitchell Northam

Final: California 75, Wake Forest 52

Cal led 32-21 in the first half and outscored Wake Forest 29-12 in the third period and ran away with the win. By the time the fourth quarter arrived, the lead had ballooned to as high as 29 points. Cal will play No. 7 Syracuse in the second round of the ACC Tournament.

The Golden Bears shot 44% from the field and held the lead for 35 minutes, 46 seconds. Calwas led by Sakima Walker, who finished her day with 17 points and 10 rebounds. The Golden Bears also added 19 points from their bench on Wednesday, which is noteworthy.

Wake Forest, which shot 38% from the field, was led by Mary Carter. Carter was one of two Demon Deacons who finished in double figures The Wake Forest guard finished with 13 points and five rebounds. — Meghan L. Hall

8 players ejected at Sun Belt Tournament

Eight players were ejected from a second round game in the Sun Belt Women’s Basketball Tournament in Pensacola, Florida, on Wednesday afternoon after a fight broke out between No. 9 Coastal Carolina and No. 12 South Alabama.

South Alabama led by nine points with about 5:39 remaining in the fourth quarter when a scuffle ensued between Cordasia Harris of South Alabama and Tracey Hueston of Coastal Carolina. Coaches and players from the benches spilled out onto the floor and one referee was caught in the crossfire, hitting the floor after taking a hit from a player. Read more here. — Mitchell Northam

Halftime: BYU 29, Houston 29

The first-round matchup between BYU and Houston, the Battle of the Cougars, has proved to be a low-scoring affair so far and we’re all tied up at halftime. 

Neither team is shooting particularly well. BYU is 9-of-23 (39%) from the field, while Houston is 10-of-33 (30%) from the field.

BYU’s Delaney Gibb leads all scorers with 11 points and four rebounds. Sydney Benally has five points, while Lara Rohkohl has four points. However, BYU has given up 15 turnovers that have kept Houston in the game. 

Jade Jones and Kierra Merchant each have seven points for Houston. — Cydney Henderson

Halftime: Florida 46, Mississippi State 30

Me’Arah O’Neal — yes, the daughter of NBA legend Shaquille O’Neal — is powering the Gators in the first half with 15 points on 5-of-10 shooting from the floor and 3-of-5 from 3-point land. Florida has also scored 14 points off 12 turnovers by the Bulldogs, while Mississippi State has two points from nine turnovers by the Gators.

NCAA Tournament hopes for both teams hinge on the outcome of this game. Mississippi State is in a better position on the bubble currently with a NET of 39, but would feel more optimistic about its prospects of cracking the field of 68 with a win here. Florida likely needs to win multiple games in Greenville, South Carolina this week to get in a bubble position. Mitchell Northam

Cal forward exits with injury

Cal forward Claudia Langarita, a starter for the Golden Bears, exited the second quarter of Wednesday’s matchup with Wake Forest with 9:41 remaining in the period. It’s unclear how Langarita was hurt, but she went down and stayed down for several moments before being helped off the court by nearby training staff.

Langarita attempted to stretch her out to the side, but she ultimately went back to the locker room. The Cal forward had a visible limp and appeared to be rubbing her right hip.

Langaratia emerged from the locker room minutes later, standing behind the Cal bench with a heat wrap on her back. She eventually sat down on the bench with just under three minutes left in the period, but did not return to action before the half. — Meghan L. Hall

Wake Forest and Cal struggle to score

In the opening quarter of Wake Forest and Cal’s matchup, neither team could get many shots to fall. Wake Forest shot 31% from the field and Cal shot 24%. Both teams made four field goals. Cal leads 11-10 over Wake Forest. — Meghan L. Hall

Final: Kansas State 91, Cincinnati 66

No. 12 Kansas State cruised to the second round of the Big 12 women’s basketball tournament following a dominant 25-point win over No. 13 Cincinnati, where the Wildcats shot a whopping 53% from the 3-point line.

Taryn Sides (20 pts) and Jordan Speiser (20) combined for eleven of Kansas State’s 17 made 3-pointers, which set a Big 12 Tournament record. Nastja Claessens made five 3-pointers and finished with 18 points in the win.

Mya Perry led Cincinnati with 23 points (7-of-19 FG, 4-of-7) and was in tears when she checked out of the final game of her college career. Perry put her jersey over her face as head coach Katrina Merriweather tried to console her.

Florida out in front early

The Gators are off to a quick and balanced start with four of their five starters scoring to build a 10-4 lead halfway through the first quarter.

Neither team is shooting particularly well with Mississippi State hitting 33% of its shots from the field and Florida 30%.

No. 13 Mississippi State vs. No. 12 Florida

Mississippi State Bulldogs starting lineup

Head coach: Sam Purcell

  • 4 Tryanna Crisp | G 5-8 – Senior
  • 5 Chandler Prater | G/F 5-10 – Senior
  • 25 Favour Nwaedozi | F 6-3 – Junior
  • 33 Kharyssa Richardson | F 6-2 Senior
  • 40 Madison Francis | F 6-2 – Freshman

Florida Gators starting lineup

Head coach: Kelly Rae Finley

  • 13 Laila Reynolds | G 6-1 – Junior
  • 23 Liv McGill | G 5-9 – Sophomore
  • 8 Me’Arah O’Neal | F 6-4 – Sophomore
  • 9 Alexa Dizeko | F 5-111- Senior
  • 14 Caterina Piatti | F 6-4 – Freshman

No. 12 Miami vs No. 13 Stanford

Final: Miami 83, Stanford 76 (OT)

Stanford tried to continue its push in overtime, but ultimately ran out of steam. Miami moves on into the second round of the ACC Tournament with an 83-76 win. The Hurricanes will play No. 5 Notre Dame next.

Miami finished shooting 51% from the field, with three scorers in double digits, including Ra Shaya Kyler, who had a double-double with 24 points and 11 rebounds, and Gal Raviv, who had 20 points, six rebounds and six assists.

Stanford shot 43% from the field and 44% from deep behind 12 3-pointers.. Courtney Ogden led the Cardinal with 22 points. — Meghan L. Hall

Stanford and Miami go to overtime

Miami led 65-52 after three quarters (and by as much as eight in the waning minutes of the fourth), but Stanford forced several Hurricane turnovers that helped the Cardinal climb back into the game. Stanford switched to a zone defense and that made the difference.

Stanford’s Courtney Ogden cashed in on five straight points with less than a minute remaining to tie the game up at 70 and force overtime. Ogden has 22 points on the day.

Miami pulling away

With about five minutes left in the third quarter, the game was tied at 49. However, Miami turned up the heat. The Hurricanes finished the period on a 16-3 run, punctuated by a deep 3-pointer from Natalie Wetzel to close the quarter. Wetzel’s 3-pointer pushed Miami’s lead to 13.

Stanford and Miami trading baskets

At the halfway point of the third quarter, the Cardinal and Hurricanes are trading 3-pointers and baskets in the paint. The defense has intensified and so has the scoring.

Stanford has a 51-49 lead with 4:49 left in the third, led by 14 points from Hailee Swain. Ra Shaya Kyle has 17 for Miami.

Halftime: Stanford 39, Miami 37

With Stanford’s season and NCAA Tournament dreams seemingly hanging in the balance against Miami, the Cardinal survived an early surge from the Hurricanes. After a 19-10 first quarter from Miami, it was all Stanford in the second quarter. The Cardinal took the period 29-18.

Miami’s Gal Raviv leads all scorers with 12 points. Hailee Swain and Courtney Ogden both have 11 points for Stanford. — Meghan L. Hall

Stanford on an 18-11 run

After trailing 19-10 after the first quarter, Stanford went on an 18-11 run to cut Miami’s nine-point lead to 2 points with 3:39 remaining in the half. Courtney Ogden leads Stanford with 11 points. The Cardinal have NCAA Tournament hopes hanging in the balance as one of the first four out in USA TODAY Sports latest bracketology. — Meghan L. Hall

Miami Hurricanes starting lineup

Head coach: Tricia Cullop

  • 0 Ra Shaya Kyle | C 6-5 – Senior
  • 33 Amarachi Kimpson | G 5-8 – Junior
  • 12 Natalie Wetzel | F 6-3 – Freshman
  • 5 Ahnay Adams | G 5-6 – Sophomore
  • 14 Gal Raviv | G 5-9 – Sophomore

Stanford Cardinal starting lineup

Head coach: Kate Paye

  • 2 Hailee Swain | G 5-11 – Freshman
  • 6 Shay Ijiwoye | G 5-6 – Sophomore
  • 40 Courtney Ogden | F 6-1 – Junior
  • 12 Lara Somfai | F 6-3 – Freshman
  • 3 Nunu Agara | F 6’2 – Junior

No. 12 Kansas State vs. No. 13 Cincinnati

Halftime: Kansas State 40, Cincinnati 29

It’s raining 3-pointers in Kansas City. Kansas State (8-of-15) and Cincinnati (4-of-8) are shooting over 50% from beyond the arc in the first round of the Big 12 Tournament, but the Wildcats have an eleven-point edge heading into halftime.

Nastja Claessens (12 points) and Taryn Sides (11 points) combined for six of Kansas State’s eight 3-pointers.

Cincinnati is outrebounding Kansas State 27-18, including 10 offensive rebounds, yet find themselves down double-digits because of turnovers. The Bearcats have given up 13 turnovers, which Kansas State converted to nine points. Mya Perry has a team-high nine points (3-of-5 from 3) for Cincinnati. — Cydney Henderson

Kansas State Wildcats starting lineup

Head coach: Jeff Mittie

  • 3 Brandie Harrod | G 6-1 – Freshman
  • 4 Nastja Claessens | F 6-1 – Junior
  • 6 Gina Garcia | G 5-10 – Freshman
  • 11 Taryn Sides  | G 5-7 – Junior
  • 34 Tess Heal | G 5-10 – Senior

Cincinnati Bearcats starting lineup

Head coach: Katrina Merriweather

  • 1 Mya Perry | G 5-11 – Senior
  • 3 Reagan Jackson | G 5-8 – Junior
  • 4 Caliyah DeVillasee | G 5-8 – Freshman
  • 10 Kylie Torrence | F 6-2 – Freshman
  • 32 Destiny Thomas | C 6-4 -Junior

No. 16 Arkansas vs. No. 9 Kentucky

Final: Kentucky 94, Arkansas 64

The Wildcats outscored the Razorbacks 29-10 in the third quarter and never looked back. Kentucky outrebounded Arkansas 35-20 and outscored them in the paint 40-30.

Although the Razorbacks were perfect on 10 3s, the Wildcats were 16 for 22 from behind the arc to keep pace.

Kentucky had six players in double figures including all of their starters. Carla Strack had a double-double with 20 points and 13 rebounds. Amelia Hassett added 18 points on 6-of-11 from behind the arc.

Kentucky faces Georgia in the tournament quarterfinals at 11 a.m. ET on Thursday (SEC Network).

Tonie Morgan pacing Kentucky run

Tonie Morgan has more points than the entire Arkansas team in the third quarter. The senior has scored 12 with six rebounds. The Wildcats now have four players in double figures and lead 70-43. The Razorbacks season looks to be coming to an end.

Kentucky taking charge

The Wildcats have gone on a 12-2 run to start the third quarter and their lead has ballooned back to 19 points. Amelia Hassett made her fifth 3-pointer to trigger an Arkansas timeout. Clara Strack has a double-double for Kentucky with 14 points and 11 rebounds.

Halftime: Kentucky 42, Arkansas 33

The Razorbacks closed out the first half on a 15-4 run to get back within single digits of the No. 19-ranked Wildcats. Arkansas is outscoring Kentucky 18-12 in the paint. Taleyah Jones has 12 points to lead the Razorbacks.

Amelia Hassett has 12 points and Clara Strack 11 points and eight rebounds for Kentucky, which had led by as many as 20 points. — Heather Burns

Arkansas trying to claw back

The Razorbacks have outscored the Wildcats 23-13 in the second quarter. Emily Robinson has eight points including two 3-pointers. Taleyah Jones has 12 points, two rebounds and two assists.

Kentucky on a 7-0 run

The Wildcats have jumped out to a 16-4 lead early after a 7-0 run against Arkansas. Asia Boone leads Kentucky with six points on a pair of 3-pointers. — Heather Burns

Arkansas Razorbacks starting lineup

Head coach: Kelsi Musick

  • 11 Wyette Mayberry | G 5-7 – Senior
  • 22 Bonnie Deas | G 5-9 – Freshman
  • 10 Taleyah Jones | G 5-10 – Senior
  • 21 Ashlynn Chlarson | C 6-3 – Junior
  • 23 Emily Robinson | G 5-10 – Junior

Kentucky starting lineup

Head coach: Kenny Brooks

  • 5 Tonie Morgan | G 5-9 – Senior
  • 7 Teonnie Key | F 6-5 – Senior
  • 8 Asia Boone | G 5-8 – Junior
  • 13 Clara Strack | C 6-5 – Junior
  • 32 Amelia Hassett | F 6-4 -Senior

SEC women’s basketball tournament bracket

Women’s college basketball bracketology

Conference tournaments begin Wednesday in women’s college basketball for a handful of leagues, including the ACC, SEC, Big Ten, Big 12, Big East, Atlantic 10 and Summit.

It’s possible a lot of the projections will change by the time USA Today Sports rolls out another bracketology next week as teams will play in high-stakes games against marquee in-conference opponents on neutral courts. Up for grabs are a few undecided spots in the top 16 and positioning on the bubble. Read more.

Big 12 women’s basketball tournament schedule today

All times Eastern

Wednesday, March 4

First Round

  • Game 1: No. 12 Kansas State 91, No. 13 Cincinnati 66
  • Game 2: No. 9 BYU 76, No. 16 Houston 66
  • Game 3: No. 10 Arizona State vs. No. 15 Arizona | 6:30 p.m. (ESPN+)
  • Game 4: No. 11 Kansas vs. No. 14 UCF | 9 p.m. (ESPN+)

Big 12 women’s basketball tournament bracket

SEC women’s basketball tournament schedule today

All times Eastern

Wednesday, March 4 – First round

  • Game 1: #16 Arkansas vs. #9 Kentucky | 11 a.m. ET (SEC Network)
  • Game 2: #13 Mississippi State vs. #12 Florida | 1:30 p.m. ET (SEC Network)
  • Game 3: #15 Auburn vs. #10 Texas A&M | 6 p.m. ET (SEC Network)
  • Game 4: #14 Missouri vs. #11 Alabama | 8:30 p.m. ET (SEC Network)

SEC women’s basketball tournament bracket

Ranking March Madness top players

The 2025-26 women’s college basketball regular season is over for the Power 4 conferences and a handful of players rose to the top ahead of the 2026 NCAA Tournament.

UConn’s Sarah Strong and Azzi Fudd are among the top players set to tipoff March Madness later this month. USA TODAY Sports ranked the top 10 players in women’s college basketball ahead of the conference tournaments that begin Wednesday, March 4, for the Power 4. Read more.

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast. Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

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New York Rangers center Vincent Trocheck could be the team’s next player who moves in a retool.

He already has let his son know about the possibility.

‘If I get traded, I’m fine,’ he told reporters earlier this week. ‘I’m not worried about myself. I’m more worried about my family.’

Though the Rangers’ struggles has led them to trade Artemi Panarin, Trocheck showed his value while winning a gold medal at the 2026 Winter Olympics. He helped Team USA go 18-for-18 on the penalty kill, including a 5-on-3 Canada power play in the final.

Trocheck, whose contact runs through 2029, said he has a 12-team no-trade list and he told reporters that the list includes Western teams.

“Family’s important to me, and my family’s on the East Coast,” he said.

Here’s a look at other players who are generating trade buzz before the 3 p.m. ET deadline on Friday, March 6 (contract details from puckpedia.com):

Center Ryan O’Reilly, Nashville Predators

O’Reilly is a former playoff MVP who has another year left on his contract. He has no trade protection, but the Predators will clear any move with him. He took a high stick to the face on March 3 and while the team said in a statement that he is expected to be fine and an update would be provided on Thursday, March 5.

Defenseman Justin Faulk, St. Louis Blues

The Blues have struggled this season and could be shopping plenty of players. Faulk is a right-shot defenseman with another year left on his deal. He has hit double digits in goals for the sixth time in his career. He has a 15-team no-trade list. Defenseman Colton Parayko is being mentioned as another candidate.

Center Nazem Kadri, Calgary Flames

He won a Stanley Cup with the Colorado Avalanche in 2022 but wasn’t re-signed and got a seven-year deal with the Flames. He has a 13-team no-trade list. Flames forward Blake Coleman is also being mentioned.

Defenseman Oliver Ekman-Larsson, Toronto Maple Leafs

He sat out Wednesday’s game, along with pending unrestricted free agents Bobby McMann and Scott Laughton. Ekman-Larsson has a Stanley Cup ring with the 2023-24 Florida Panthers and can put up points. He is signed through 2028 at a reasonable $3.5 million cap hit and has a 16-team no-trade list.

Forward Jake DeBrusk, Vancouver Canucks

The Canucks have moved out Quinn Hughes, Kiefer Sherwood and Tyler Myers. More could be coming for the NHL’s last-place team. Jake DeBrusk told the Vancouver Province that a rebuild ‘is not something I would be OK with or accepting.’ The 29-year-old is in the second year of a seven-year contract.

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Wednesday, March 4, was a day for defensemen to change teams.

Tyler Myers got the ball rolling by accepting a trade from the Vancouver Canucks to the Dallas Stars. The 6-foot-8 Houston native will be playing in his home state on the same team as 6-foot-7 defenseman Liam Bischel.

Nick Blankenburg also moved from the Nashville Predators to the Colorado Avalanche for a 2027 fifth-round pick.

But the biggest move of the day was the Utah Mammoth acquiring defenseman MacKenzie Weegar from the Calgary Flames.

“Acquiring MacKenzie solidifies our back end as we continue to push towards the playoffs, and he will be a great addition to our team on and off the ice,” Mammoth general manager Bill Armstrong said.

Here are the details and grades on the MacKenzie Weegar trade:

MacKenzie Weegar trade details

The Utah Mammoth acquire defenseman MacKenzie Weegar from the Calgary Flames for defenseman Olli Määttä, forward Jonathan Castagna and three 2026 second-round picks (Utah’s own and others previously acquired from the Ottawa Senators and New York Rangers). Both players had to waive their no-trade clauses for the deal to go through.

Utah Mammoth trade grade: A-

Armstrong has been aggressively remaking the defense since the team moved to Utah in 2024. He added Mikhail Sergachev, John Marino and Ian Cole that first season and Stanley Cup winner Nate Schmidt last summer. Weegar gives the Mammoth a solid top four as they try to hold onto their wild-card position. And the Mammoth landed him without trading Tij Iginla, who would seem a natural to be part of a trade to Calgary, where his father Jarome had starred.

Calgary Flames trade grade: B-

Considering that Weegar is signed through 2031, it’s surprising that the Flames didn’t pry away a first-round pick. But three second-rounders are good in what’s expected to be a deep draft. Olli Määttä is a pending unrestricted free agent and Castagna, a third-round pick, is averaging a point a game in his third season at Cornell.

When is the NHL trade deadline?

The NHL trade deadline is at 3 p.m. ET on Friday, March 6.

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An Iranian refugee held at gunpoint at school before fleeing Iran during the 1979 revolution is calling for hope, democracy and prayers for his homeland as the U.S. joins Israel in targeting Iran’s ruling clerical regime.

David Nasser, now an American pastor, spoke to Fox News Digital six days after Operation Epic Fury was launched in Iran — an event that reignited haunting memories for him and of the time when he was 9 years old.

‘As a child, my family and I were forced to escape Iran and run for our lives,’ Nasser, President and CEO of David Nasser Outreach recalled.

‘We found safe harbor as refugees granted political asylum here in the United States,’ Nasser said, before describing how his father had been a high-ranking officer in Iran’s military, meaning ‘his family became targets as the government collapsed.’

‘One of my most vivid memories of realizing that nothing was ever going to be the same again was at a school assembly on a military base – a soldier called out three names and mine was called first,’ he said.

‘When I got to the front, the soldier dropped a piece of paper, took a gun out of his holster and put it to my head and quoted the Quran. He told me that he was sent to make an example out of me,’ Nasser added.

The principal intervened, but the message he relayed was unmistakable. Nasser recalled.

‘They’re killing everybody who’s anybody. They’re trying to make an example out of people like our family, and they’re using fear,’ he remembered hearing at the time.

‘That’s one of my first memories of the revolution, but really just being completely scared for my life.’

Soon after, Nasser’s family devised an escape plan. They would pretend Nasser’s mother needed emergency heart surgery in Switzerland and buy round-trip tickets to avoid raising suspicion.

‘We bought round-trip airline tickets, like we were going and coming back, but we weren’t coming back. We were running for our lives,’ he said.

At the airport, Nasser remembers gripping his father’s hand tightly and hearing words he will never forget.

”If they find out we’re escaping, they’re going to kill us right here on the spot,” my father said as his hands shook, holding mine, he said. ‘The last time I was in Iran, I was a 9-year-old little boy running for my life,’ he said.

Now, watching events unfold in Iran from the safety of the U.S., Nasser said his heart remains with millions of desperate Iranians facing uncertainty.

‘We see them — I see them, I hear them. My heart is beating really fast for them right now, with hope and with prayers for their protection and their provision,’ Nasser said.

‘Protection. I’m praying for protection for them. I want to be a part of the provision for them. If Iran transitions from a theocracy to a democracy,’ he said, ‘I want to help rebuild.’

‘If this moment actually comes, and they go from a theocracy to a democracy, I want to be a part of the solution — for that 9-year-old little boy that I once was. I want to do this for him.’

Beyond political change, Nasser, who is also Teaching Pastor at New Vision Baptist Church, said he takes solace in what he describes as spiritual transformation already underway, calling it ‘the fastest-growing church in the world right now, or the underground church in Iran.’

‘We know there’s at minimum 4 million, at maximum 8 million Christians right now in Iran,’ he said.

‘In Iran, if you convert from Islam to Christianity, that can be a death sentence. If they come into your home and you’re gathering for Christian worship, they will take your home title, you will lose your home.’

‘They’re in prison. They’re being tortured. They’re being ridiculed. They’re being mocked,’ he added.

‘Above all, I came to America, and it was a land of opportunity, and I was given the gift of democracy, so I would love to see democracy in Iran, where all the boys and girls are afforded what I was afforded when I managed to escape.’

Related Article

Exiled Iranian crown prince says US strikes mark
Exiled Iranian crown prince says US strikes mark ‘beginning of the very end’ for regime
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Australia and Chinese Taipei open the 2026 World Baseball Classic at the Tokyo Dome at 10 p.m. ET on Wednesday, a late-night treat for fans of the game’s premier international tournament.

‘Growing up I always looked ahead and kind of had a vision of things I wanted to do in this game, and this was a big part of it,’ said Australian-born infielder Travis Bazzana, the first overall pick in the 2024 MLB draft. ‘Young me would be dreaming of and now it’s here. Just got to make the most of it.’

Chinese Taipei and Australia are joined in Pool C by Japan, South Korea and Czechia.

Follow for live updates:

How to watch Chinese Taipei vs Australia: TV channel, stream

  • Matchup: Chinese Taipei vs. Australia
  • Time: 10 p.m.
  • Location: Tokyo (Tokyo Dome)
  • TV: FS1
  • Streaming: FOX One App

Stream the World Baseball Classic on Fubo

Australia WBC starting pitcher vs. Chinese Taipei

Alex Wells will serve as Australia’s starting pitcher on Wednesday against Chinese Taipei. Wells previously played for the Baltimore Orioles in 2021 and 2022.

He started eight of the 13 games he played in, allowing 58 hits and 34 earned runs while striking out 32 in 46.1 innings pitched.

Australia WBC roster 2026

Pitchers

  • Kieren Hall (RHP) – Perth Heat
  • Ky Hampton (RHP) – Adelaide Giants
  • Josh Hendrickson (LHP) – Adelaide Giants
  • Sam Holland (RHP) – Brisbane Bandits
  • Jon Kennedy (LHP) – Brisbane Bandits
  • Connor MacDonald (RHP) – Brisbane Bandits
  • Cooper Morgan (LHP) – Adelaide Giants
  • Mitch Neunborn (RHP) – Philadelphia Phillies org
  • Jack O’Loughlin (LHP) – Adelaide Giants
  • Warwick Saupold (RHP) – Perth Heat
  • Blake Townsend (LHP) – Texas Rangers org
  • Todd Van Steensel (RHP) – Adelaide Giants
  • Alex Wells (LHP) – Sydney Blue Sox
  • Lachlan Wells (LHP) – LG Twins (KBO)
  • Coen Wynne (RHP) – Sydney Blue Sox

Catchers

  • Mitchell Edwards – Adelaide Giants
  • Alex Hall – Perth Heat
  • Robbie Perkins – Brisbane Bandits

Infielders

  • Travis Bazzana – Cleveland Guardians org
  • George Callil – Brisbane Bandits
  • Jarryd Dale – KIA Tigers (KBO)
  • Robbie Glendinning – Adelaide Giants
  • Curtis Mead – Chicago White Sox
  • Logan Wade – Brisbane Bandits
  • Rixon Wingrove – Brisbane Bandits

Outfielders

  • Ulrich Bojarski – Melbourne Aces
  • Chris Burke – Melbourne Aces
  • Max Durrington – Oakland Athletics org
  • Tim Kennelly – Perth Heat
  • Aaron Whitefield – Melbourne Aces

Chinese Taipei WBC roster 2026

  • Pitchers: Hsu Jo-hsi, Gu Lin Ruei-yang, Lin Yu-min, Lin Wei-en, Po-Yu Chen, Zhuang Chen Zhong-Ao, Sha Tzu-chen, Sun Yi-lei, Tseng Jyun-yue, Lin Kai-wei, Lin Shi-xiang, Chang Yi, Chen Kuan-yu, Hu Chih-wei, Cheng Hao-chun, and Zhang Jun-wei.
  • Catchers: Kungkuan Giljegiljaw, Lyle Lin (Lin Chia-cheng) and Jiang Shao-hong.
  • Infielders: Yu Chang, Tsung-Che Cheng, Lee Hao-yu, Chiang Kun-yu, Wu Nien-ting and Lin Tzu-wei.
  • Outfielders: Stuart Fairchild, Chen Chieh-hsien (Captain), Lin An-ko and Chen Chen-wei.

What WBC pool are Chinese Taipei and Australia in?

Chinese Taipei and Australia are two of the five teams playing in Pool C of the World Baseball Classic. The rest of the group includes Japan, Korea and Czechia.

World Baseball Classic Pool C schedule

  • March 5: Chinese Taipei vs. Australia
  • March 5: Czechia vs. South Korea
  • March 6: Australia vs. Czechia
  • March 6: Japan vs. Chinese Taipei
  • March 7: Chinese Taipei vs. Czechia
  • March 7: South Korea vs. Japan
  • March 8: Chinese Taipei vs. South Korea
  • March 8: Australia vs. Japan
  • March 9: South Korea vs. Australia
  • March 10: Czechia vs. Japan
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For the fourth time in four years, Stefon Diggs will have a new NFL home.

The four-time Pro Bowl wide receiver is set to be released by the New England Patriots when the new league year starts next week, according to multiple reports. With that move, Diggs is set to yet again return to the free-agent market with which he’s become so familiar.

But where might his next stop be?

Diggs’ release was driven by financial considerations, per reports, with the Patriots avoiding an additional $6 million in his contract becoming guaranteed by the end of next week. Long known as one of the league’s most talented yet mercurial pass catchers, he worked his way back from a torn anterior cruciate ligament in 2024 to become a key figure in the Patriots’ Super Bowl run, leading the team with 85 catches and 1,013 receiving yards. Even amid speculation that the team could part ways with Diggs, coach Mike Vrabel also lauded him for setting a high standard for the rest of the offense.

‘Well, I mean, not only his future, but what he was able to do for us and come in and provide leadership,’ Vrabel said at the NFL scouting combine last week when asked about evaluating Diggs’ place on the team moving forward. ‘He worked extremely hard in the time that he was rehabbing from the knee. I think he was just a really good presence each and every week.’

But Diggs also faces felony strangulation and misdemeanor charges related to an alleged incident with his personal chef. His next scheduled appearance for a pretrial hearing comes on April 1 – a full three weeks after the official start of free agency. The lack of clarity and potential for league discipline could complicate his standing with teams.

Still, the 32-year-old could still emerge as an alluring option for teams looking to upgrade their aerial attacks.

Here are five possible landing spots for Diggs:

Denver Broncos

Diggs said prior to Super Bowl 60 that he was ‘close’ to signing with the Broncos last offseason before deciding to link up with the Patriots. Could a second courtship be in order between the two sides?

The elevation of Davis Webb, Diggs’ former teammate with the Buffalo Bills, to offensive coordinator and play-caller might help Denver’s case. The wideout credited Webb with teaching him ‘a lot of the offense’ in Buffalo. Diggs also spoke highly of Sean Payton and Bo Nix before concluding that Denver had ‘a good situation’ and ‘a great organization.’ For Diggs, landing with another leading Super Bowl contender with a clear need at his position would represent a nice bounce-back.

The Broncos have plenty of reason to revisit a potential partnership, too. Courtland Sutton, who has been propping up the receiver room for some time, will turn 31 in the fall and lacks a suitable running mate on the perimeter. For Nix to put the offense over the top, another dynamic – or at least reliable – weapon might be required.

Washington Commanders

How compelling might a homecoming be for Diggs? The Gaithersburg, Maryland, native first rose to prominence as a five-star recruit at Good Counsel High School before staying at home to play collegiately for the Terrapins. Now, with Deebo Samuel widely expected to head elsewhere in free agency, the Commanders don’t have much in the way of receiving threats beyond Terry McLaurin.

General manager Adam Peters has shown a particular affinity for pursuing higher-priced, older veterans to capitalize on having Jayden Daniels on a rookie contract, so Diggs might be of more interest to him than some other decision-makers. Finding someone who can alleviate pressure on Daniels – and McLaurin – should be a top concern for Washington, and turning to a free agent rather than a rookie might be preferable for an organization looking to get things in order as quickly as possible. So long as he doesn’t eat up too much in terms of a cap space commitment, Diggs might allow the Commanders to patch up that one problem area while still leaving plenty of resources to be used on reconfiguring the woeful defense.

Tennessee Titans

Might Diggs be up to the task of boosting an immensely talented second-year quarterback yet again? One year after he played a critical role in the meteoric rise of Drake Maye, the receiver could be a major asset for Cam Ward. The No. 1 pick showed immense promise as a rookie but also struggled to compensate for a shortage of skill-position support. With leading wideout Calvin Ridley a cut candidate and top target Chig Okonkwo seemingly headed elsewhere in free agency, Tennessee looks to be in for a drastic – and necessary – remaking of its receiving corps.

With their $93.8 million in available cap space ranking second among all teams, according to Over the Cap, financial considerations for the Titans shouldn’t factor in too heavily. Diggs and offensive coordinator Brian Daboll have also spoken effusively about one another after their time together in Buffalo, with the receiver notching a career-high 127 catches and 1,535 receiving yards in 2020. It’s worth noting, however, that multiple reports have been linked to other free-agent receivers, including ex-New York Giant Wan’Dale Robinson.

Pittsburgh Steelers

In his time as Steelers GM, Omar Khan has exhibited a distinct penchant for pursuing big names with even bigger personalities, including Aaron Rodgers, DK Metcalf and Jalen Ramsey last offseason. Why not add one more volatile ingredient to the stew, then, as the team resists a rebuild? New coach Mike McCarthy has plenty of experience in keeping combustible situations from reaching a crisis point. And the Steelers have plenty of incentive to bring aboard a player who could help the passing attack get out of the checkdown mode that proved largely inescapable with Rodgers at the helm last fall.

Las Vegas Raiders

First-year Raiders head coach Klint Kubiak and offensive coordinator Andrew Janocko were both with the Minnesota Vikings when Diggs made his star turn with the franchise at the beginning of his career. That might not exactly be a point in Diggs’ favor, given the way his acrimonious exit went down. Still, the two know the capabilities of the receiver, who could fill a glaring veteran void in the receiving corps after the midseason trade sending Jakobi Meyers to the Jacksonville Jaguars. Las Vegas has already invested in second-year targets Jack Bech and Dont’e Thornon Jr., so going with a more proven product might be the preferred way to upgrade the supporting cast for expected No. 1 pick Fernando Mendoza.

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